Cannabis Indica

Rainer Kunad
Rainer Kunad 1992 in Dresden
Born(1936-10-24)24 October 1936
Chemnitz, Germany
Died17 July 1995(1995-07-17) (aged 58)
Reutlingen, Germany
EducationMusikhochschule Leipzig
Occupations
  • Conductor
  • Composer
Organizations
Awards

Rainer Kunad (24 October 1936, Chemnitz – 17 July 1995, Reutlingen)[1] was a German conductor and composer, especially of opera.

Life[edit]

Kunad studied choir and ensemble conducting at the Dresden Conservatoire from 1955 to 1956 and then, until 1959, composition with Fidelio F. Finke and Ottmar Gerster at the Musikhochschule in Leipzig.[1] From 1960 to 1974, he directed theatrical music at the Staatsschauspiel Dresden, and 1971 onward, he also worked at the Berlin State Opera.[1] Kunad was a regular member of the Academy of the Arts of the GDR since 1974. In 1972, he received the Art Prize of the German Democratic Republic, the Hanns-Eisler-Preis [de] in 1973, and the National Prize of the German Democratic Republic in 1975.

In 1985, he applied to the authorities for a dismissal from GDR citizenship, which was granted. He lived in West Germany from 1984 onward.[2] He spent the last years of his life as a freelance artist in Tübingen.

Kunad composed piano pieces, chamber and orchestral music and operas (among others, Bill Brook, according to a story by Wolfgang Borchert and Der Meister und Margarita after the novel by Mikhail Bulgakov).

Works[edit]

Operas

  • Bill Brook (1959/60), premiered Dresden 1965
  • Das Schloss (1961/62)
  • Old Fritz (1962/63, premiered Dresden 1965
  • Maître Pathelin oder Die Hammelkomödie (1968), premiered Dresden 1969
  • Sabellicus (1972/73, premiered Berlin 1974
  • Litauische Claviere (1974, premiered Dresden 1976
  • Der Eiertanz, premiered Bautzen 1975
  • Vincent (1975/76), premiered Dresden 1979
  • Amphitryon, premiered Berlin 1984)
  • Der Meister und Margarita (1982/83), premiered 1986
  • Der Traum (1993), premiered Hagen 2000

Ballets

  • Ich: Orpheus (1964/65)
  • Wir aber nennen Liebe lebendigen Frieden (1970), premiered Dresden 1972
  • Münchhausen (1977/78), premiered Weimar and Kassel 1981

Symphonies

  • Sinfonie 64 (1964)
  • Sinfonie II (1966/67)
  • Sinfonietta (1969), premiered Schwerin

Concertos

  • Piano Cncerto (1969), premiered Dresden 1971
  • Concerto for Harpsichord, Pianom Jonika, Celesta and Orchestra (1970)
  • Concerto for Organ, two string orchestras and timpani (1971), premiered Dresden 1971

Orchestral

  • Sinfonia variatione (1959)
  • Pathelin-Portrait (1974)
  • Divertimento (1968)
  • Antiphonie (1971), premiered Frankfurt/Oder
  • Quadrophonie (1973)
  • Szène concertante (1975), premiered Dresden 1976

Chamber music:

  • Aphorismen (1956/57)
  • String Quartet No. 1 (1957)
  • Konzertantes Klaviertrio (1958)
  • Notturno for cello solo (1958)
  • Grande Ouverture for two pianos
  • Musik für Bläser (1965)
  • Concerto per Archi (1966)
  • String Quartet No. 2 (1967)
  • Commedia 'Die Ehe' (1969)
  • Pneumatika for akkordion (1971)
  • Duomix (1973)
  • Miniaturen for organ and percussion (1977/78)
  • Mozartparaphrase
  • Phantysy for organ
  • Rimstinger Adventsmusik
  • Sonatine for piano (1992)

Vocal music

  • Schattenland Ströme, Gesänge nach Gedichten von Johannes Bobrowski (1966)
  • Melodie, die ich verloren hatte, Gesänge nach Versen von Günter Deicke (1968)
  • Von der Kocherie, Ein kulinarisches Loblied (1970)
  • Pro novo, after Dante Alighieri (1973)
  • Metai, nach Texten von Kristijonas Donelaitis (Das Jahr, Die Jahreszeiten)
  • Klopstock-Ode, premiered Dresden
  • Bobrowski-Motette, premiered Berlin 1981
  • Honig holen
  • Dona nobis, premiered Dresden 1992
  • Mit dem Hauch seines Mundes, Christus und der Antichrist (1988/89)

Oratorios

  • Das Spiel vom Heliand (1957)
  • Pax mundi (1966)
  • Die Kitschpostille (1974)
  • Stimmen der Völker, premiered Dresden 1983

Sacred oratorios

  • Salomonische Stimmen (1982), premiered Dresden 1984
  • Das Thomas-Evangelium (1984/85), premiered Kiel 1987
  • Trilogie der Offenbarung Gottes:
    • Part I: Jovian, der Seher (1985), premiered Mannheim 1987
    • Part II: Der Seher von Patmos (1985/86), premiered Karlsruhe 1988
    • Part III: Das neue Jerusalem (1986), premiered Sindelfingen 1989
  • Die Pforte der Freude (1987), premiered Stuttgart and Tübingen 1990

Mystery plays

  • Die Menschen von Babel (1983/84), premiered Munich 1986
  • Kosmischer Advent, Spiel von der Wiederkunft des Herrn (1987), premiered Ulm and Munich 1991

Sacred symphonies

  • Symphony No. 3 "Sinfonie des göttlichen Friedens" (1986/87), premiered Darmstadt 1989
  • Symphony No. 9 "Die sieben Siegel" (1993), premiered Reutlingen 1993
  • Symphony No. 12 "Der Berg Zion" (1994), premiered in Dresden 1996

Literature[edit]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

Leave a Reply