Euripides: Medea Eleni Karaindrou
Album info
Album-Release:
2014
HRA-Release:
14.01.2014
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
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- 1 Argo's Voyage 01:42
- 2 Ceremonial Procession 03:48
- 3 On the Way to Exile 04:51
- 4 The Haze of Mania 01:14
- 5 Medeas Lament I 01:47
- 6 Woman of Mourning 01:20
- 7 Medeas Lament II 01:46
- 8 Loss 01:43
- 9 Backwards to Their Sources 03:41
- 10 A Sinister Decision 03:56
- 11 Loves Great Malevolence 03:23
- 12 For the Sake of a Greeks Words 01:51
- 13 Do Not Kill Your Children 04:31
- 14 An Unbearable Song 01:21
- 15 All Hope Is Lost 03:24
- 16 The Night of Killing 02:49
- 17 Silence 02:10
Info for Euripides: Medea
Greek composer Eleni Karaindrou’s collaborations with stage director Antonis Antypas have generated some of her most powerful music. Medea, like the earlier Trojan Women, comes out of this association. Created to accompany performances at the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus, the music vibrates with emotional intensity. Karaindrou gives her themes to a small ensemble, its sound-colours creating an ambiance both archaic and contemporary, as textures of santouri, ney, lyra and clarinets are combined and contrasted. Even with reduced instrumental forces the composer seems to imply an orchestral scope. Giorgos Cheimonas’ Modern Greek adaptation of Euripides provides the lyrics, movingly sung by a 15-piece chorus under the direction of Antonis Kontogeorgiou and, on two pieces, by the composer.
Euripides’ play, first staged in 431 BC, counts amongst the darkest of the dramas of antiquity, a harrowing tale of betrayal, rage, retribution, madness, and infanticide. When Jason abandons Medea to marry Glauce, daughter of King Creon, and thereby strengthen his political influence, Medea responds with a fury that knows no bounds. In a programme note for the Epidaurus production, Antonis Antypas writes “Medea’s divine lineage [in Greek mythology she was the niece of Circe, granddaughter of the sun god Helios] and preoccupation with the heroic code of honour gird her and put the knife in her hand. Her passion for Jason has humanized her, but when Jason’s betrayal reveals her sacrifice to have been in vain, she regains her divine stature and the right to punish her mortal husband for his hubris.”
Karaindrou counterpoints the plot with music that builds tension also through restraint and silences. Already the pulsing of the bendir on “Ceremonial Procession” and the baleful melodies for ney and clarinet seem to anticipate the misfortunes ahead. The themes passed from clarinet to cello in “On The Way To Exile” are laden with melancholy. In her liner note Eleni praises the commitment of the players, “travelling with me through Euripdes’ bleak world of poetry, unfolding their song, compassionate toward the play’s characters.” They convey “sounds of the Orient, Greek but also global” to underline the drama of the barbarian Medea, “whose love for the Greek Jason made her renounce her homeland, father and mother.”
Eleni Karaindrou’s is the first voice heard on the album, singing Medea’s laments. Thereafter the chorus take up the tale, enumerating the consequences of “love’s great malevolence”.
Eleni Karaindrou, voice
Socratis Sinopoulos Constantinople, lute & lyra
Harris Lambrakis, ney
Nikos Guinos, clarinet
Marie-Cecile Boulard, clarinet
Alexandros Arkadopoulos, clarinet
Giorgos Kaloudis, violoncello
Andreas Katsigiannis, santouri
Andreas Papas, bendir
Antonis Kontogeorgiou, Choir director
Recorded June 2011 at Studio Sierra, Athens
Engineered by Giorgos Karyotis
Edited and mixed June 2013 by Manfred Eicher and Giorgos Karyotis
Produced by Manfred Eicher
Eleni Karaindrou was born in the Greek mountain village of Teichio. She studied piano and musical theory at the Athens Hellenic Conservatory, history and archaeology at the University of Athens, and ethnomusicology and orchestration at the Sorbonne and the Scuola Cantorum in Paris.
Since 1975 she has composed music for more than twenty feature films, and for more than 40 theatre plays and numerous television productions. Collaborating most often with Greek directors – above all Theo Angelopoulos, with whom she has had an ongoing creative association since 1983 – she has also worked with Harold Pinter, Chris Marker, Jules Dassin, Margarethe von Trotta and others.
Karaindrou has received numerous awards including the State Music Award (Greece) for her music for “Eternity and a Day”, the Dmitris Mitropoulos Award for her music for theatre (1994-96), and the Fellini Award from Europa Cinema, Italy. In 2002 she received the Golden Cross of the Order of Honor from the Greek president, for her life’s work. In 2004 she was nominated for the European Film Award for her music for “The Weeping Meadow”, which was also Oscar-nominated.
Eleni Karaindrou has been an ECM recording artist since 1991, working closely with producer Manfred Eicher in the adapting of compositions originally written for stage and screen for album release. Her ECM discs include “Music for Films”, “The Suspended Step of the Stork”, “Ulysses’ Gaze”, “Eternity and a Day”, “Trojan Women”, “The Weeping Meadow”, “Elegy of the Uprooting” (released in CD and DVD versions) and “Dust of Time”.
Booklet for Euripides: Medea