4035719003574

Frano Parac: Judita

Sofija Petrovic; Evelin Novak; Diana Haller; Stjepan Franetovic; Matteo Ivan Rasic; Ivica Cikes; Ma

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Format: CD

Cat No: 900357

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  10 October 2025

Label:  Br Klassik - Full Price / BR Klassik

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  4035719003574

Genres:  Classical  Opera  

Composer/Series:  Frano Parac

  • Description

    On December 1, 2024, Ivan Repusic, chief conductor of the Munich Radio Orchestra, conducted a concert performance of Frano Parac's opera Judita at Munich's Prinzregententheater. This two-act, seven-scene opera is about the siege of a city by brutal foreign invaders. The biblical story of Judith, who liberates her homeland of Bethulia from its Assyrian occupiers by killing Holofernes, certainly has parallels with Croatian history, particularly that of the city of Split. From the mid-15th century onwards, the country repeatedly fought against incursions by the Ottoman Empire - and Split in Dalmatia was particularly vulnerable to the attacks of the Turks, who advanced to its gates. The poet Marko Marulic (1450-1524) alludes to these events in allegorical form in his epic Judita, completed in 1501. One of the earliest poetic works in the Croatian language, it established Marulic's reputation as the father of Croatian literature. To celebrate the 550th anniversary of the author's birth in 2000, and in commemoration of the 1,700th anniversary of the foundation of Split, Frano Parac, a composer born in Split in 1948, chose the epic Judita as the basis for his first opera. It premiered on July 14, 2000 at the Croatian National Theatre in Split. The live recording made in December 2023 is now being released on CD by BR-KLASSIK, supplemented by Dance of the Baroness (Ples Barunice) from Parac's 1985 dramatic ballet Carmina Krleziana, based on texts by the expressionist-modernist writer Miroslav Krleza. First published in 1990 in a piano version, the dance is a rewarding and effective piece for pianists - and its orchestral version is equally impressive.

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