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Classical concerts featuring
Thomas Blondelle

Overview

Quick overview of musician Thomas Blondelle by associated keywords

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These concerts featuring Thomas Blondelle became visible lately at Concert Pulse.

Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Sun, Apr 12, 2026, 18:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Kate Lindsey (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Èric le Sage (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Wed, Apr 15, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Kate Lindsey (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Èric le Sage (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Fri, Apr 17, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Annette Dasch (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Wolfram Rieger (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar

Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Thomas Blondelle in season 2024/25 or later

Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In Paris

Richard Wagner / Siegfried

Fri, Apr 4, 2025, 18:30
Philharmonie de Paris, Grande salle Pierre Boulez (Paris)
Dresdner Festspielorchester, Concerto Köln, Kent Nagano (Conductor), Thomas Blondelle (Siegfried), Christian Elsner (Mime), Derek Welton (Der Wanderer), Daniel Schmutzhard (Alberich), Hanno Müller-Brachmann (Fafner), Gerhild Romberger (Erda), Åsa Jäger (Brünnhilde), nn (Waldvogel)
Performed by the musicians of Concerto Köln and the Dresdner Festspielorchester under the direction of Kent Nagano, this Siegfried is the fruit of years of research into what would be a historically informed reading of Wagner’s operas.
Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In Köln

Richard Wagner: Siegfried

Thu, Apr 10, 2025, 18:00
Thomas Blondelle (Tenor), Christian Elsner (Tenor), Derek Welton (Bass-Bariton), Daniel Schmutzhard (Bariton), Hanno Müller-Brachmann (Bass), Gerhild Romberger (Mezzo-Soprano), Åsa Jäger (Soprano), Concerto Köln (Ensemble), Dresdner Festspielorchester, Kent Nagano (Conductor)
Now he sets out into the world: Siegfried, the free hero, is to set right what Wotan, the father of the gods, messed up at the beginning of the story. Finally, part three of Wagner's "Ring of the Nibelung" can be experienced in Kent Nagano's original sound project. Siegfried grows up in the forest, reforges the sword Nothung, slays the dragon Fafner, wins from him the "Ring of the Nibelung", breaks Wotan's spear and lovingly awakens the Valkyrie Brünnhilde.
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Sun, Apr 12, 2026, 18:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Kate Lindsey (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Èric le Sage (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Wed, Apr 15, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Kate Lindsey (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Èric le Sage (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Fri, Apr 17, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Annette Dasch (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Wolfram Rieger (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Wed, Apr 22, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Marlis Petersen (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Matthias Lademann (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Sat, Apr 25, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Marlis Petersen (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Matthias Lademann (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Fri, May 15, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Annette Dasch (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Wolfram Rieger (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Wed, May 20, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Elsa Dreisig (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Joseph Middleton (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Women's love and death

Fri, May 22, 2026, 19:00
Karina Canellakis (Musical Director), Elsa Dreisig (Sängerin), Johan Reuter (Blaubart), Johan Reuter (Simone), Annika Schlicht (Judith), Ambur Braid (Bianca), Joseph Middleton (Piano), Thomas Blondelle (Guido), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
THREE MASTERPIECES - TWO CENTURIES - ONE NARRATIVE WOMEN'S LOVE AND LIFE Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) Composition: Robert Schumann Libretto: Adelbert von Chamisso BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE Opera in one act (1918) Composition: Béla Bartók Libretto: Béla Balázs A FLORENTINE TRAGEDY Opera in one act (1917) Composition: Alexander Zemlinsky Libretto: Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar Wilde's poem of the same name poem of the same name in the translation by Max Meyerfeld Times change, but the place doesn't. Tobias Kratzer, director of Frauenliebe und -sterben, combines masterpieces by three composers and wraps them in a narrative that resembles a great family epic. In the process, the supposed individual fates become panoramas of the customs and morals of our past and present. Robert Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -leben (Women's Love and Life) - 1840 depicts the fate of countless women: first love, marriage, marriage, birth and finally death. The feelings of the nameless protagonist revolve around the needs of her husband, who becomes more and more distant from her. A generation later, the current master of the house, Duke Bluebeard, brings home a new wife: Judith. The two are magically attracted to each other - she fascinated by the mysterious stranger, he by her splendor. But little by little, Judith discovers Bluebeard's past life and the abysses that lurk there. And another leap in time: in the Florentine tragedy, we see a completely new marriage structure - bourgeois, but thoroughly liberal. When Simone catches his wife Bianca having an affair with the young Guido, he forgives her. But traditional gender roles increasingly dominate. The ménage à trois escalates. In short: do people desire the same in all times? Where are the differences? Musical direction: Karina Canellakis Production: Tobias Kratzer Stage and costumes: Rainer Sellmaier Video: Manuel Braun Lighting: Michael Bauer Dramaturgy: Henriette von Schnakenburg Eight songs for voice and piano op. 42 (1840) / Opera in one act (1918) / Opera in one act (1917) Texts by: Adelbert von Chamisso / Béla Balázs / Alexander Zemlinsky after Oscar