Sounds and Sweet Airs

2. John Casken and John Tomlinson: The Shackled King

February 10, 2021 Shakespeare and Music Study Group Season 1 Episode 2
2. John Casken and John Tomlinson: The Shackled King
Sounds and Sweet Airs
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Sounds and Sweet Airs
2. John Casken and John Tomlinson: The Shackled King
Feb 10, 2021 Season 1 Episode 2
Shakespeare and Music Study Group

If you’d like to find out more about the Shakespeare and Music Group, please visit shakespeareandmusic.wordpress.com and @shakesmus on Twitter.

Episode 2

In this episode of 'Sounds and Sweet Airs', Michelle Assay talks with composer John Casken and singer Sir John Tomlinson about their new drama The Shackled King, a condensed version of Shakespeare’s King Lear. 

The Shackled King  starts at the end of the play where the King and Cordelia are in prison, he hardly recognising his daughter. Through a series of flashbacks the story is told, but returns to the present, in prison, a number of times. The work is for two singers with a small ensemble. The role of Lear is sung by a bass, and Cordelia by a mezzo-soprano who also sings the part of the King’s philosophical friend, the Fool. 

00:02:27: Beer garden beginnings

00:09:27: Wotan and Lear

00:18:08: Memory

00:25:28: Libretto and title

00:27:43: The Fool

00:29:29: Instrumentation

00:33:48: Inspirations: 'Shakespeare never preaches'

00:41:10: Genre, word setting, psychology

00:49:37: Staging, rehearsal, performance

01:02:55: Musical language

01:09:17: Final thoughts: mournfully human and full of gaps

Sir John Tomlinson was awarded a CBE in 1997 and knighted in 2005. He has sung for the world’s leading opera houses, including the Metropolitan Opera, La Scala, Deutsche Oper and Staatsoper, Berlin, Munich, Dresden, Geneva and Paris, the Salzburg, Aix-en-Provence, Munich and Glyndebourne festivals and all the leading British companies. He made his Bayreuth Festival debut in 1988 as Wotan (Der Ring des Nibelungen) under Daniel Barenboim and went on to sing there every summer from 1989 to 2006.

John Casken is a composer of orchestral, chamber, vocal, choral music and music for the stage in the form of two operas, a melodrama, a monodrama, and a dramatic work based on King Lear.  His two operas have been performed internationally with seven productions of the first one, Golem (1989) in England, USA, Germany and France, and two productions of the second, God’s Liar (2001), in London, Brussels, and Vienna.

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If you’d like to find out more about the Shakespeare and Music Group, please visit shakespeareandmusic.wordpress.com and @shakesmus on Twitter.

Episode 2

In this episode of 'Sounds and Sweet Airs', Michelle Assay talks with composer John Casken and singer Sir John Tomlinson about their new drama The Shackled King, a condensed version of Shakespeare’s King Lear. 

The Shackled King  starts at the end of the play where the King and Cordelia are in prison, he hardly recognising his daughter. Through a series of flashbacks the story is told, but returns to the present, in prison, a number of times. The work is for two singers with a small ensemble. The role of Lear is sung by a bass, and Cordelia by a mezzo-soprano who also sings the part of the King’s philosophical friend, the Fool. 

00:02:27: Beer garden beginnings

00:09:27: Wotan and Lear

00:18:08: Memory

00:25:28: Libretto and title

00:27:43: The Fool

00:29:29: Instrumentation

00:33:48: Inspirations: 'Shakespeare never preaches'

00:41:10: Genre, word setting, psychology

00:49:37: Staging, rehearsal, performance

01:02:55: Musical language

01:09:17: Final thoughts: mournfully human and full of gaps

Sir John Tomlinson was awarded a CBE in 1997 and knighted in 2005. He has sung for the world’s leading opera houses, including the Metropolitan Opera, La Scala, Deutsche Oper and Staatsoper, Berlin, Munich, Dresden, Geneva and Paris, the Salzburg, Aix-en-Provence, Munich and Glyndebourne festivals and all the leading British companies. He made his Bayreuth Festival debut in 1988 as Wotan (Der Ring des Nibelungen) under Daniel Barenboim and went on to sing there every summer from 1989 to 2006.

John Casken is a composer of orchestral, chamber, vocal, choral music and music for the stage in the form of two operas, a melodrama, a monodrama, and a dramatic work based on King Lear.  His two operas have been performed internationally with seven productions of the first one, Golem (1989) in England, USA, Germany and France, and two productions of the second, God’s Liar (2001), in London, Brussels, and Vienna.

Beer garden beginnings
Wotan and Lear
Memory
Libretto and title
The Fool
Instrumentation
Inspirations: 'Shakespeare never preaches'
Genre, word setting, psychology
Staging, rehearsal, performance
Musical language
Final thoughts: mournfully human and full of gaps