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Jan Müller-Wieland (*1966) and the rose [1995]

Chamber in 1 act for 7 singers and 7 instrumentalists by Jan Müller-Wieland based on a fairytale by Oscar Wilde German by Hannelore Neves 75’

Nightingale...... mezzo soprano (dark, melancholy) Student...... high baritone (bright, light, young) White, yellow and red bouquet of roses...... bass (large, dark, serious) Lizard, butterfly, daisy, oak tree, girl...... soprano (bright, light, young) Three shepherds...... tenor, baritone, bass perc (3 gongs, 3 tam-t [high/low/middle], marimba, vibr). cel/piano. 2 vl. va. vc. db (five-string)

A student is passionately in love with a young girl. She promises to dance with him at the Prince’s ball if he brings her a red rose. In his entire garden, however, there is not a single red rose to be found. Deeply sadde- ned by this, the young man begins to cry. The nightingale sitting in the oak tree, however, is moved by the student’s unhappy love and believes that she recognises in him the ideal lover. She decides to look for a red rose for him. In the first bouquet of roses she finds only white petals, in the second only yellow ones, and in the third, which would normally have red roses, only dried-out buds. The rose bouquet explains to her that there is only one way to get a red rose: the nightingale must sing for the bouquet the whole night through, at the same time pressing one of his thorns so tightly against her breast that a red rose can be created out of the blood of her heart. The nightingale is prepared to make this sacrifice for love, which will cost her life. The following night, she passionately sings her sweet song and colours with her heart’s blood a splendid rose. The next day shining petals are displayed on the bouquet but the nightingale is lying in the grass, dead. Overjoyed at having at last found a red rose, the student hurries to his beloved. In the meantime, another suitor has presented her with expensive gifts and she rejects the rose. The student furiously throws away the rose twig into the gutter, where the petals wither, unnoticed. Disappointed in love, he now returns to dedicate himself completely to his studies.