Vocalist Ute Lemper performed Kurt Weill's Seven Deadly Sins on Wednesday, October 1, and Thursday, October 2, in Toronto at the Roy Thomson Hall with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. And will perform it at Carnegie Hall tonight Saturday, October 4, 2008.
Multi-talented German sensation
Ute Lemper is a singer, songwriter, painter, actress, and writer. Deeply influenced by her homeland's dark, complex, and powerfully creative past, Lemper is one of the most compelling and versatile artists in the world today. Along with other influential artists such as
Lou Reed,
Nina Hagen, and Roger Waters,
Ute Lemper is today's keeper of the Weimar-era creative flame.
As a young composer,
Kurt Weill (1900 - 1950) was drawn to musical theatre and vocal music, and his songs were tremendously popular throughout Germany by the beginning of the 1930s. He composed his sung ballet (ballet chanté), The Seven Deadly Sins in 1933, a very turbulent time throughout Europe. Because of his Jewish background and creative collaborations with leftist writer
Bertolt Brecht, Weill was forced to flee his native country and settle in Paris. The highly satirical
The Seven Deadly Sins was Weill's last work composed in his European theatre style, most notably characterized by its directness. After his death in 1950, his widow
Lotte Lenya revived this remarkable work, known for its biting critique of capitalism and remarkably haunting music. Since then, it has never lost its appeal with audiences and performers alike. Ms. Lemper's 1990 recording of The Seven Deadly Sins is available on the Decca label. Also heard on the program will be
Dmitri Shostakovich "Symphony No. 11 in G Minor, Op. 103 "The Year 1905."