Bran's poems, also known as Bojland's songs, are immortal masterpieces in the history of music and have profound cultural connotations. These poems and dramas come from 13 to 14 century wandering poets. They were wandering scholars and clergy from England, France and Germany in the Middle Ages, and were famous for writing satirical rhymes and poems praising wine and indulging in debauchery. Bran's poems reflect the creative style of these wandering poets. These poems have different themes and styles, including wine songs, solemn love poems and indulgent love songs, religious poems and pastoral lyrics, and satirical poems directed at the church and the government. The composer Orff was greatly shocked when he read Bran's poems in 1935. He gave this strange poem a new and eternal life with rough, powerful and passionate music. Orff's Bran Poetry was completed in 1936, and its full title is Bran Poetry, a secular song with solo and chorus accompanied by instrumental music and wonderful stage scenes. It is a grand "situational chorus". Its huge establishment includes soprano, tenor and baritone solos, chorus with chorus and children's chorus, and large orchestra with two pianos and various percussion instruments. This magnificent work premiered in Frankfurt, Germany on June 8, 1937. It brings people into a completely different world, and its magical music awakens the joyful impulse in human nature with incredible power. Since its publication and recording, this work has been the most infectious and wonderful classic choral work. It is also an important teaching material to test the strength and cooperation ability of conductors, bands and singers.
Kamena Bulana is a mysterious poem in13rd century. It was hidden in a monastery in Bavaria for centuries, and once it was made public, it shocked the world. This is the best-preserved medieval poem with the highest artistic value. As if it came from heaven, not from human beings.
German composer carl orff (1895— 1982) lived in Bavaria for a long time. He selected 25 poems from this manuscript and composed this poem "bran poem", which is divided into three themes: "spring", "wine" and "love".
The overture is majestic and solemn, and the composer seems to be trying to build a temple by singing and listening. The first part of the official song "Spring" is light and bright, and contains a long distance. The male and female voices of the chorus alternate like the day and night changes in the time series; The second "Pub" is a secular scene, which uses the falsetto and tone sandhi of actors, just like describing the world of people living in the scene of masked parties; But strangely, the jubilant scene seems to be as cold as a passing ghost; The third book, Love, has the catharsis of longing for love, the ode to love sadness and the simple singing of lust. Among them, the female voice singing "On the Balance" was gorgeous and sad, which became a classic in the concert.
Composer carl orff added a new melody on the basis of inheriting the classical composition method. Under the influence of "expressionism", he used neo-primitivism elements and added percussion elements to the rhythm, which made Bran's poems perfectly combine medieval vagrancy with modern singing.
Bran's poems are full of amazing elements and drama. Full of majestic shouts and euphemistic hymns, it makes a surging sound like a raging torrent crashing on a rock, and it is like a gurgling stream winding to a soft grass beach. Band and singing complement each other; Shock percussion music is like the call of fate, which has a strong soul-knocking effect. Bran's Poetry is a hymn of life, as if God's eyes were watching in the dark. Under the guidance of the three themes, motives such as "belief" and "death" are skillfully involved, and the tonality has both secular joy and epic momentum. The real motive implied in it is pity, regret and lament for the short life. Rilke's poem is used to describe this work: "The true God of mercy, when he comes, is majestic and radiant, just like the gods. /Better than the wind blowing the boat. "
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