Michael William Balfe
Michael William Balfe , actually Balph (born May 15, 1808 in Dublin , † October 20, 1870 in Ware , Hertfordshire ) was an Irish composer , violinist , opera singer (baritone) and conductor .
Life
Balfe was born at 10 Pitt Street in Dublin to dance teacher William Balfe (1783-1823) and Catherine (Ryan) Balfe, a niece of the composer, librettist and spy Leonard McNally (1752-1820). He showed musical talent at an early age, taking violin lessons from James Barton and the composer William Rooke (1794–1847). In 1817, at the age of nine, he made his first public appearance as a violinist.
After the early death of his father, he moved to London in 1823 , where he was tutored by Charles Horn (1786-1849) and his father Karl Friedrich Horn (1762-1830). In 1825 he moved to Paris . There he met Rossini , on whose recommendation he went to Italy for a few years, where he perfected his musical training and in 1831 married the Hungarian singer Magdalena Roser (1806–1888). His first appearance at La Scala in Milan took place in May 1834 in Rossini's Otello .
Returning to Paris, he soon made his debut as a singer in Rossini's The Barber of Seville . After a short stay in England in 1835, he returned to Italy. At La Scala in Milan, he took on a part in Rossini's opera Otello . The first successful own compositions caused a sensation. In the following years Balfe mainly worked in France and England. With his most successful opera The Bohemian Girl (libretto Alfred Bunn), he also celebrated great triumphs in the USA and throughout Europe. In German-speaking countries the opera was performed under the title Die Zigeunerin . As a conductor he has performed very successfully in Austria , Italy and Russia, among others .
Balfe died in his country house, Rowney Abbey in Ware, Hertfordshire , where he had settled in 1864, of bronchial asthma (which he had suffered from for most of his life) combined with pneumonia .
Works
His compositional work includes operas , ballads , songs and chamber music . However, he was accused of too great an influence of Rossini's works on his early compositions, which later disappeared. Balfe soon developed his own compositional style that met the taste of his international audience at the time. He is considered to be the preeminent Irish opera composer of his time.
He composed numerous works, including 28 operas.
- The Lover's Mistake / Young Fanny , published in 1822 by Isaac Willis, Westmoreland Street, Dublin.
- The Siege of Rochelle , first performed on October 27, 1835 at the Theater Royal, Drury Lane
- The Maid of Artois , first performed May 27, 1836 at the Drury Lane Theater, London .
- Cantata Semper pensoso e torbido
- The Prayer of the Nation 1838, perhaps for Queen Victoria's coronation .
- Falstaff , London 1838
- La Zingara , Trieste 1854. German as Die Zigeunerin . Libretto by Alfred Bunn , in German by Joseph Kupelwieser , premiered in Vienna in 1846, then performances in Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Darmstadt, Munich and Stuttgart.
- The Daughter of St. Mark , opera, text by Alfred Bunn based on the libretto La Reine de Chypre by Jules Henri Vernoy Marquis de Saint-Georges , first performance on Nov. 27, 1844 in London, Drury Lane. The opera deals with the life of Katharina Cornaro .
Other works:
- I Rivali di se stessi (February 1830, Teatro Carolino, Palermo)
- Un Avertimento ai Gelosi (1830, Teatro Fraschini, Pavia)
- Catherine Gray (May 27, 1837, Drury Lane, London)
- Joan of Arc (November 30, 1837, Drury Lane, London)
- The Bohemian Girl (1839, Grand Opéra, Paris - filmed in 1936 with Laurel and Hardy )
- Les Quatre Fils Aymon (July 15, 1844, Opéra-Comique , Paris, libretto by Adolphe de Leuven and Léon-Lévy Brunswick ). German as The Four Haimons Children (translated by Joseph Kupelwieser )
- Pittore e Duca (November 21, 1844, Teatro Communale, Trieste)
- L´Etoile de Séville (December 17, 1845, Paris)
- The Maid of Honor (December 20, 1847, Drury Lane, London)
- The Rose of Castille (October 29, 1857, Lyceum Theater , London)
- The Puritan's daughter (November 30, 1861, Covent Garden , London)
- Blanche de Nevers (November 21, 1862, Covent Garden, London)
- The Armourers of Nantes (February 12, 1863, Covent Garden, London)
- Il Talismano (June 11, 1874, Royal Court, Liverpool)
Web links
- Literature by and about Michael William Balfe in the catalog of the German National Library
- Works by and about Michael William Balfe in the German Digital Library
- Sheet music and audio files by Michael William Balfe in the International Music Score Library Project
- List of stage works by Michael William Balfe based on the MGG at Operone
- Michael William Balfe at Operissimo on the basis of the Great Singer Lexicon
- Information on britishandirishworld.com
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Balfe, Michael William |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Irish composer, violinist, opera singer (baritone) and conductor |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 15, 1808 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Dublin |
DATE OF DEATH | October 20, 1870 |
Place of death | Ware , Hertfordshire |