Recordings of Thespis
The Schlotter Discography |
Complete Recordings |
Excerpts
Charles Schlotter's Thespis Discography
It all started, innocently enough, with a posting from one Albert Flower
to Savoynet,
the G&S-centric internet discussion group, that he had found
a Thespis score among the papers he had inherited from his
great-great uncle, Sir Arthur Sullivan. After an initial adrenalin
rush, most people calmly looked at the posting date April 1, 1997
and figured out that this was a clever hoax (though one poor soul
was actually taken in).
Later that day, the hoax's creators reported the "tragic death of
Albert Flower," and the amusing little thread was over. But, a few
days later, the Charles Schlotter took the joke a step further when
he posted a Discography of recordings
based on the score the putative Mr. Flower had described. The Scholotter
Discography, "one of the most delightful pieces ever posted to Savoynet,"
was thoroughly entertaining and totally made-up.
Mr. Schlotter has kindly allowed me to post his Thespis
Discography here, which is appropriate
because it spoofs many of the descriptions found at this site, besides
being hilarious in its own right. As Charles wittily put it, this web
site "is probably the only place on cyberearth where people relish a
good Amy Augarde joke."
Complete Recordings
The original score of Thespis does not survive, but that has not
stopped many an enterprising Savoyard from either composing their own
score or assembling one from existing Sullivan melodies. The Fulham
Thespisthe only commercial
recording of the operatook the latter course. This recording is not
likely to be encountered today, except by lucky chance in a second-hand
record shop.
Excerpts from Thespis
There are only three surviving items known to be from Thespis:
"Climbing over rocky mountain," "Little maid of Arcadee," and the ballet.
(Many fans have identified tunes in the later operas that fit Thespis
lyrics uncannily well, but it is mere supposition that they were borrowed
from the earlier work.)
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"Climbing over rocky mountain."
There is no recording of "Climbing over..." in its Thespis form,
aside from the complete recording listed above.
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"Little maid of Arcadee."
This Thespis number survives because it was published as a detached
number for the Victorian living room. Besides the complete recording listed
above, Donald Adams sings on his 1971 recital disc,
Donald Adams Sings Sullivan and Gilbert.
Jeffrey Benton sings it on
If Dougty Deeds.
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The Ballet.
For many years, "Climbing over rocky mountain" and "Little maid of Arcadee"
were thought to be the only surviving movements that could definitely be
ascribed to Thespis. Then, in 1990, Roderick Spencer and Selwyn
Tillett of the Sir Arthur Sullivan Society astonished the G&S community
with the discovery of the Thespis ballet music.
The story of how Spencer and Tillett found and identified the Thespis
ballet music is too circuitous to describe in full. The story, in brief, is
that while preparing a performing edition of Sullivan's 1864 ballet
L'Ile Enchantée, several
numbers were found in a different copyist's handwriting, and with a
different pagination, from the rest of the work. Furthermore, two of
them were captioned "Act 2," yet, L'Ile is not divided into acts.
All three appeared to be scored for a theatre pit orchestra, rather than
a ballet orchestra.
Clearly, the three numbers were from another Sullivan work, but which one?
Internal evidence too involved to recount here suggested Thespis,
but the proof came when it was found that the handwriting and pagination
of those numbers were consistent with the only surviving manuscript that
undeniably came from Thespis, the score of "Climbing over rocky
mountain" found in Sullivan's Pirates autograph (with Thespis
words crossed out and Pirates words written in).
Gaps in the pagination of the three numbers suggested that two more numbers
were needed to recreate the Thespis ballet in its entirety. Moreover, the quantity of
missing pages suggested how long the remaining numbers had to be. Spencer
and Tillett were, in fact, able to find two more numbers that, although
not in the same handwriting, could in all probability be ascribed to the
lost opera. Thus it was that these five numbers, certainly the most
important Sullivan discovery of the 1990s, were brought to light and
identified as the "Thespis Ballet Music."
There are two recordings, both claiming to be world premieres:
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New D'Oyly Carte Opera Orchestra; John Pryce-Jones, conductor; 1991.
Issue History
| Date | Label | Format | Number | Comments |
| 1991 |
TER |
CD |
CDTER2 1188 |
with Iolanthe |
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RTE Concert Orchestra, Dublin; Andrew Penny, conductor; 1992.
Issue History
| Date | Label | Format | Number | Comments |
| 1992 |
Marco Polo |
CD |
8.223460 |
with L'Ile Enchantée |
The G&S Archive's Thespis Page
Marc Shepherd, oakapple@cris.com
Copyright ©1995-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Last Modified: 30-Oct-01
URL: http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/thes.htm
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