Carmina Burana has delighted audiences at Eberbach Monastery also in 2025

Carmina Burana, Rheingau Music Festival, Eberbach Monastery, Ciitzens Choir Cologne, Chamber Choir University Cologne, Annija Adamsone Sopran, Michael Schade Tenor, Michael Nagy Bariton.

Carl Orff never did what others thought was right or wanted him to do – an individualist who had no interest in classical genres such as symphonies, string quartets, or concertos.

In 1934, the almost 40-year-old Orff was searching for a subject that would help him achieve his major breakthrough. “Fortune had been kind to me,” he later admitted. In a Würzburg antiquarian book catalog, he discovered a title that “attracted him with magical force.” He was referring to the collection “Carmina Burana,” with song and drama texts, drinking songs and love songs, both moral and satirical, a European compendium from the Middle Ages. The authors of the texts are mostly unknown. The only surviving manuscript dates from around 1230. Continue reading “Carmina Burana has delighted audiences at Eberbach Monastery also in 2025”

Carmina Burana – A musical firework

Monastery Eberbach/Foto: Ansgar Klostermann

The former Cistercian monastery of Eberbach is the perfect location for the performance of Carl Orff’s musical firework “Carmina Burana”.  It was also chosen for the film adaptation of Umberto Eco’s “The Name of the Rose” from 300 monasteries when looking for a suitable medieval venue. It is not surprising that Carmina Burana has been fully booked three times at this year’s Rheingau Music Festival. This was also emphasised by Michael Herrmann, artistic director and managing director of the festival, in his welcoming speech in the basilica. The Rheingau landscape in which the monastery is nestled and the simple, three-aisled Romanesque basilica, built between 1136 and 1186, have a magical attraction. Continue reading “Carmina Burana – A musical firework”