Project Description
Carmina Burana
Created in Collaboration with The Akron Symphony Orchestra
Credits
Premiere
May 7, 2016
E.J. Thomas Hall at the University of Akron
Choreography
David Shimotakahara
Conductor
Christopher Wilkins
Music
Carl Orff
Lighting Design
Dennis Dugan
Costumes Design
Janet Bolick
Set Design
Ian Petroni
Original Cast
Felise Bagley, Lucie Baker, Andre Drummond, Lauren Garson, Damien Highfield, Blake Krapels, Michael Marquez, Annika Sheaff
David Shimotakahara has created an exciting new adaptation of Carl Orffâs scenic cantata, Carmina Burana. Composed by Orff in 1935 and 1936 and quickly becoming a principle piece of classical music repertoire, the beloved work is based on 24 poems and dramatic texts from the medieval collection Carmina Burana. Orffâs Carmina Burana has a nearly universal appeal. It is dramatic yet accessible, mixing elements that are both primal and ethereal. The musicâs driving rhythms and rich imagery are sublimely suited for dance and Shimotakahara has realized the huge range of Orffâs dynamic score in a way that is uniquely âGroundWorks.â
Carmina Burana is one of the most recognized and popular pieces of classical music in the canon. From its full Latin title, âCarmina Burana: Cantiones profanĂŚ cantoribus et choris cantandĂŚ comitantibus instrumentis atque imaginibus magicisâ (meaning “Songs of Beuern: Secular songs for singers and choruses to be sung together with instruments and magic images”), it was clear GroundWorks would focus on the magic. The structure and libretto of Carmina are loosely based around a collection of 24 poems from the 13th century, covering a wide range of topics having to do with the fickleness of fortune, the ephemeral nature of life and the pleasures and pain of love. âI have taken full advantage of these universal themes, freely interpreting their context, and responding to Orffâs dynamic and expressive score,â says Shimotakahara. âI have framed this production from the perspective of one who is looking back at lifeâs experience. How each of us looking back, must come to terms with our limitations in the face of all that life has to offer, in order to appreciate our own experience and recapture its wonder.â