Back To Artist
Erling Wold : Mordake
Log in to add to your wishlist
Erling Wold has been hailed as “the Eric Satie of Berkeley surrealist/minimalist electro-art rock” by the Village Voice. Mordake’s title role is sung by John Duykers, known for his work in John Adams’ Nixon in China.
Genre: Avant Garde: Classical Avant-Garde
Release Date: 2010
Mordake
Erling Wold
Record Label: MinMax
  • Buy CD - $14.50
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!

Share This Album

| Share
Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Overture 4:56 Album Only
2. Panthera Leo 4:41 Album Only
3. Supper, sir 2:39 Album Only
4. Go get our supper! 3:22 Album Only
5. What have you done? 4:10 Album Only
6. I’m no murderer 4:22 Album Only
7. Doctor! Doctor! 2:27 Album Only
8. Once there was a boy (1) 2:10 Album Only
9. You killed me before 2:19 Album Only
10. You’ve never said that 6:20 Album Only
11. You say I take 3:24 Album Only
12. Once there was a boy (2) 4:53 Album Only
13. I want to see him 5:20 Album Only
14. My sister, my love 6:35 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Erling Wold’s chamber opera Mordake tells the story of young Edvard Mordake, a man of high birth, secreted away in his apartments due to his disfigurement: a woman’s face on the back of his head, whose constant imprecations, heard by him alone, lead him on a terrifying course of action, one that may result in his own destruction.

John Duykers sings the title role. An internationally acclaimed tenor, he has appeared with many leading opera companies, including The Lyric Opera of Chicago, San Francisco Opera, New York City Opera, Seattle Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Royal Opera Covent Garden, Netherlands Opera, Frankfurt Opera, Santa Fe Opera, and the Los Angeles Opera. Duykers most celebrated role was Mao Zedong in the 1987 world-premiere of John Adams’ Nixon in China, which was televised (winning an Emmy Award), and recorded (winning a Grammy Award).

The librettist of the opera is the remarkable Douglas Kearney, a teacher of African American poetry, opera and myth at CalArts, well known for his recent performance work with Anne LeBaron. This recording follows Wold’s earlier release on MinMax, the critically acclaimed opera A Little Girl Dreams of Taking the Veil.

“Mordake packs a multi-sensory punch inside a tightly knit production... If the story of Mordake is a tragic, eerie and at times wickedly funny rumination on the split in the human ego – the violent psychic struggle to reconcile the different parts of our own porous personality – we appreciate its universal tensions because it wraps us so completely in its subject’s deeply fraught isolation,” writes SF360. The San Francisco Chronicle rhapsodizes that “[Duykers] storms, he blusters, he bewails his fate – and, when necessary, he taps into reserves of sweetly tuned lyricism... a dynamic, affecting performance.”

Wold, an eclectic composer whose teachers include Gerard Grisey, Andrew Imbrie and John Chowning, has been hailed as “the Eric Satie of Berkeley surrealist/minimalist electro-art rock” by the Village Voice. His opera Queer, on the book by William Burroughs, will be in San Francisco and New York as part of the 25th anniversary of the publication of the book. His Missa Beati Notkeri Balbuli Sancti Galli Monachi was commissioned and premiered by the Abbey of St. Gallen, Switzerland. He has collaborated with electronic and noise musicians, filmmakers (Jon Jost) and dance companies, including interactive audio and video projects with Palindrome Dance, Nürnberg.

Read more...

REVIEWS

Sell your music on CD Baby and iTunes! Minimize this Tab Open this Tab