General information
Title CZSvatební košile [auth.]
Title ENThe Spectre´s Bride
Title DEDie Geisterbraut
CategoryVocal Music
SubcategoryCantatas with Orchestra
Halbreich number214 I A
Author of lyrics/libretto Erben, Karel Jaromír
Durata27'
Instruments2222-2220-Timp-Batt-Pf(a quattro mani)-Archi; Coro femminile
Solo voiceS T B
Origin
Place of compositionParis
Year of origin1932
Initiation of composition30.01.1932
Completion of composition11.02.1932
First performance
Autograph deposition
Owner of the sourceČeské muzeum hudby
Note on the autograph depostitionPiano reduction by foreign hand (Ladislav Urban) located at the Bohuslav Martinů Centre in Polička.
Copyright
Note on copyrightDilia, Prague
Purchase linkbuy
First edition
PublisherDilia – Divadelní a literární agentura
Place of issuePraha
Year of publication2004
Editions available at the BM Institute
Dilia – Divadelní a literární agentura, Prague, 2004
Call number at the BM Institute: 1308, 130 kv
Specification of the edition: 1st edition - large score and piano reduction
Details of this edition
Bärenreiter Praha, Prague, 2019
Call number at the BM Institute: SV MAR 7
Specification of the edition: Bohuslav Martinů Complete Edition
Details of this edition
Sources
References Related writings
Related images
Documents in the Library
Note Autograph score contains 2 title pages with diverse subtitles: 1) "Balada (K. J. Erben.)" [Ballad]; 2. "Balada na báseň K. J. Erbena" [Ballad on K. J. Erben's Poem].
The Spectre´s Bride, H 214 I A, was formerly inclued in the third act of the first version of the Chap-Book, H 214 I.
About the composition

Martinů’s three-act ballet with voices Špalíček dates from the middle of his years in Paris. The work has no overarching narrative; rather, it unfolds through a series of vignettes based on a series of “folk tales and Czech traditions”, as Martinů described it in a letter to the music publishers Schott on 13 February 1932. In the original version of the ballet, the episodes are relatively short in Acts 1 and 2, but Act 3 consists of just two longer pieces, The Legend of Saint Dorothea and The Spectre’s Bride. The composition proces of the closing section The Spectre’s Bride is dated 30 January to 11 February 1932. The Spectre’s Bride is scored for soprano, tenor and bass soloists, women’s choir and orchestra. Erben’s ghoulish ballad telling the story of a young girl abducted by the ghost of her dead fiancé is simultaneously narrated by the voices and acted out by the dancers.

The first performance of Špalíček took place at the Prague National Theatre on 19 September 1933 under the baton of Jožka Charvát (choreography and direction by Joe Jenčík, scenic design by Josef Matěj Gottlieb). Around the beginning of 1940, Martinů seems to have decided that Špalíček needed revising. He confides in a letter sent to Miloš Šafránek on 15 February 1940 that he would like some of his theatre pieces to be played in the USA, suggesting that Špalíček might be his best bet, but observing that the ballet would have to be reworked into a more “integrated form”. Two of the most radical changes were the shortening of The Legend of Saint Dorothea and the removal altogether of The Spectre’s Bride. The revised version had to wait until several years after the War for its premiere, which was given at the Prague National Theatre on 2 April 1949 under the baton of Václav Kašlík.

Paul Wingfield, The Bohuslav Martinů Complete Edition: Field Mass, H 279, The Spectre’s Bride, H 214 I A, series VI/2/2, Prague: Bärenreiter, 2019.

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