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  • An animal neighbourhood
    An animal neighbourhood 
    No News. The production of an "animal trilogy" including Camille Saint-Saëns' "Carnival of the Animals" is already the second major cooperation between the Mozarteum University and the Marionette Theatre. On the violin: Benjamin Schmid. The idea for this new production with three classics of literature and music had been in the back of the minds of the puppet theatre team around its artistic director Philippe Brunner for a long time. The famous "zoological fantasy" Carnival of the Animals by the French composer Camille Saint-Saëns in a poetic new interpretation formed its starting point. Expanded by the two pieces: The Story of Babar the Little Elephant by Jean de Brunhoff and Ferdinand the Bull by Munro Leaf. The story of Babar, who flees to a city and finds pleasure in the life of the people, is very well known in France, yet it is rarely brought to the stage - an added incentive. The two literary children's stories are not interwoven and yet both tell of growing up and gaining experience. In Ferdinand the bull, who doesn't like the fights of his peers and prefers to enjoy the scent of flowers, the message is added that being different is okay. The musical realisation is done in cooperation with students of the Mozarteum University under the direction of Andreas Groethuysen and Benjamin Schmid, who also plays the part of the solo violin. "Each piece is a work of art in itself. It was simply nice to combine these three different pieces musically as well, the rehearsals are a lot of fun," as Philippe Brunner reports. And it is not only meant to be fun for children: These are pieces for adults, families and children. The Carnival of the Animals is not based on a children's story, although Camille Saint-Saëns was considered a humorous French composer who cultivated an unusual and cheerful style of teaching. Play and seriousness were combined and he had his classes rehearse persiflage, among other things. In 1886, on the occasion of a carnival concert, he finally wrote Carnival of the Animals with some jocular musical elements, which was premiered on a small scale on 9 March. However, merely assessing the piece as a parody or caricature - Saint-Saëns not only imitated various animal sounds with instruments in his work, but also parodied his fellow composers - falls short. (Cf. Michael Stegemann, 1986 p. 219ff) "The Carnaval des animaux is not a malicious but an affectionate caricature" (Michael Stegemann, 1986 p. 226). Andreas Groethuysen, who as a professor at the Mozarteum University prepares the studying piano duos for this piece, knows that students love to perform it. "It is a prime example of humour in music," as Groethuysen explains, and yet it is quite demanding to play, not only because in this case it is performed four-handed on one piano. The duos - there are two of them, also to be prepared for failures - need four to six weeks to prepare. In any case, this performance is enriching for the students. They accompany a story and have to react to what happens on stage. It will be exciting to see to what extent the scenic events influence the play. However, it is not only the musicians who are challenged, the puppeteers have also internalised the scores, as Philippe Brunner reports. So the play and the music will influence each other. In addition to the piano duo, students with flute, clarinet, percussion, violoncello and double bass under the direction of Benjamin Schmid (violin) will also be involved in the Carnival of the Animals. The story of Babar, as part of a series of children's books, was written in 1931 and set to music by Francis Poulenc in a version for narrator and piano between 1940 and 1945. At the Marionette Theatre Salzburg, the original version with piano is used. Because, as Brunner points out, it is precisely this version that has a transparency and brilliance that is difficult to achieve with orchestra. Ferdinand the Bull was published as a children's book in 1936. In 1971 it was set to music for solo violin by Alan Ridout. Until now, puppet theatre pieces have only been accompanied by live music in co-productions with the Mozart Week. The live musical accompaniment by artists from the Mozarteum University is therefore a novelty and offers the chance to expand the repertoire. The musical accompaniment to the stories is not insignificant. Music is created to generate emotions and, especially in this case, images. "Every music has its character and its expression, mostly states of mind or emotions. Music therefore lends itself very well to telling stories. There is no other art that moves so deeply," Groethuysen is convinced. The production is special in many ways. It consists of three different plays with three different directing teams. The preparation and realisation time is just under two years. The plays are short, and yet a story needs to be told - not an easy undertaking for the director. The puppet theatre team went above and beyond with more than 30 new puppets, most of which, including their costumes, were made in-house, with numerous set elements, including a large glass house with furniture, props, crochet work and even wool they dyed themselves. Large animals such as elephants and a bull are not everyday work even for the experienced puppet makers and puppeteers (the performers combine both professions) of the puppet theatre. The animals have to be easy to move, which in some cases requires several puppeteers. Most of the figures are moved from a height of two metres on strings - whereby the puppeteers assume an extremely challenging posture. The strings make it impossible to change the figures, which means that a separate puppet had to be made for each costume! Moreover, the special skin given to the animal figures in The Story of Babar involved many "crochet evenings", as Susanne Tiefenbacher, Managing Director of the Salzburg Marionette Theatre, recalls with a smile. Anyone who thinks that figures today come from 3-D printers and that much can be done with plastic is mistaken. The core of the figures is made of wood, to which are added foams, textiles and wool. The trades involved in this production are carpentry, tailoring, costume design, locksmithery, sculpture, technology for lighting and sound, among others. The performance team, including live music and the narrator, comprises a total of 23 people. However, all these challenges are rewarded. The production will be included in the standard repertoire of the Salzburg Marionette Theatre and can hopefully inspire young and old for many years to come! About the production: BABAR: Director: Lisa Stumpfögger; Stage design and figurines: Herbert Kapplmüller; figure construction: Max Kiener-Laubenbacher, Vladimir Fediakov; narrator: Hanna Schygulla FERDINAND: Director: Philippe Brunner; Figurine and puppet construction: Vladimir Fediakov; Illustrations: Clemens Birsak; Narrator: Matthias Bundschuh  KARNEVAL DER TIERE: Director and stage design: Matthias Bundschuh; Figurines and puppet construction: Barbara and Günter Weinhold (First published in the Uni-Nachrichten / Salzburger Nachrichten on 10 June 2023) Tickets (Opens in new tab) Skip slider The story of Babar, the little elephant Video Special 15.6.2023 The story of Babar, the little elephant  Ferdinand the Bull Video Special 15.6.2023 Ferdinand the Bull  Carnival of the Animals Video Special 15.6.2023 Carnival of the Animals  Jump to slider start Performance 23.8.2023 Carnival of the Animals: An Animal Trilogy In a varied hour, students tell under the direction of Andreas Groethuysen and Benjamin Schmid, who also plays the part of the solo violin, three musical animal stories in cooperation with the Salzburg Marionette Theater. More More News Noh SeungJu receives one-year grant for music 17.10.2025 Noh SeungJu receives one-year grant for music  Composer Noh SeungJu, who was born in Seoul (South Korea) and is  currently resident in Salzburg, has been awarded the 2025 Music Grant by the State of Salzburg. Congratulations! Awards & Successes Alek Niemiro receives the Austrian Art Alumni Award 2025 14.10.2025 Alek Niemiro receives the Austrian Art Alumni Award 2025  Alek Niemiro, a graduate of the Thomas Bernhard Institute's directing programme, has been awarded the new Austrian Art Alumni Award for his project ‘Last Hour of Resistance’. Starting this year, the award will be presented annually by the BMFWF and Austrian art universities to selected outstanding graduates, and comes with a twelve-month scholarship worth €24,000. Congratulations! Awards & Successes Grand opening of the new Mozarteum University building "UMAK" 10.10.2025 Grand opening of the new Mozarteum University building "UMAK"  We are proud to announce that, after two and a half years of construction work, the Mozarteum University’s newest building, located in Schwarzstraße 36, is now complete and officially open! This exciting new space, with a surface area of 1,895m2, is dedicated to teaching, rehearsing, research, advancement and appreciation of the arts, and digital arts. Press release Early music as a sounding board for the future 6.10.2025 Early music as a sounding board for the future  Cycles, Seasons, Sounds of the Future: November sees the second staging on the interdisciplinary ORA – Original Sound Festival at the Mozarteum University Salzburg. News
    News
  • Carnival of the Animals
    23.8.2023
    Carnival of the Animals 
    In a varied hour, students tell under the direction of Andreas Groethuysen and Benjamin Schmid, who also plays the part of the solo violin, three musical animal stories in cooperation with the Salzburg Marionette Theater.
    Event
  • Art in the age of digitality
    13.10.2023
    Art in the age of digitality 
    Christopher Lindinger is an innovation researcher, computer scientist and cultural manager. He co-founded the Futurelab at Ars Electronica in Linz and was co-director of the Media Lab until he was appointed vice rector at JKU Linz in 2019. On October 1, he took up the first professorship for art and digitality at the Mozarteum University.
    News
  • Meral Guneyman
    5.11.2024
    Meral Guneyman 
    Meral Guneyman is a versatile classical musician, with numerous releases, who is comfortable in both pop and jazz music, has transcribed many original works and is also an enthusiastic arranger and improviser. Her ability to move between classical and jazz with lightning speed and conviction is a rarity. In 2021, her arrangements of classic David Bowie songs were presented for the first time on ‘Steinway-Spirio’ - a high-resolution self-playing system of the highest quality.
    News
  • MA in Instrumental Pedagogy - Cello
    Music, Music Education
    MA in Instrumental Pedagogy - Cello 
    Study program
  • Individual ↔ Collectivum
    1.10.2012
    Individual ↔ Collectivum 
    Students of the 7A class of the BORG-Nonntal will create a music-theatrical performance of the improvisational-experimental score Individuum↔Collectivum (1979) by the composer Vinko Globokar. How can experimental-improvisational artistic interactions be described as aesthetic and social phenomena? Which methods prove to be particularly suitable for this purpose and what conclusions can be drawn in order to specifically promote aesthetic competences in music lessons?
    News
  • Sound Christmas trees and other gifts
    1.9.2017
    Sound Christmas trees and other gifts 
    An autograph from the hand of Joseph Mohr, written around 1820, is the oldest surviving autograph of a carol which, starting in Oberndorf, quickly spread throughout the 'old' and 'new' world. Silent Night" is a song that - translated into many languages - has become an integral part of the Christmas message of peace. To what extent can a 100-year-old song appeal to young people today and become an impulse for creative work? Pupils of the BORG Oberndorf and the BORG-Gastein are invited to deal imaginatively with the topics opened up by the song and to reflect on and evaluate the products of their work together.
    News
  • Schools@Concert
    16.2.2018
    Schools@Concert 
    The European research project "Schools@Concerts - Tuning up for the music experience", which is anchored at the University Mozarteum Salzburg, focuses on cooperations between schools and concert organizers and researches them from different perspectives through a multiple case study.
    News
  • Singing in Music Education (SiME)
    1.10.2020
    Singing in Music Education (SiME) 
    News … Home News Singing in Music Education (SiME) Singing in Music Education (SiME) 01.10.2020 Research project SiME (Singing in Music Education) is a Special Focus Group of EAS (European Association for Music in schools) and was founded in 2017 by Helmut Schaumberger at the EAS conference in Salzburg. SiME Leadership Team Sanna Salminen, University of Jyväskylä (FIN) Johannes van der Sandt, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano (IT) Helmut Schaumberger, University Mozarteum Salzburg (AT) Motje Wolf, De Montfort University Leicester (UK) SiME is a platform of European researchers and practitioners that develops, supports and implements research ideas and projects on singing in schools. Through relevant research and initiatives, SiME contributes to the promotion and development of singing in European schools. The Special Focus Group currently has over 90 members and meets at the annual EAS conference in a European country.
    News
  • The pleasure of doing: 30 years of folk music studies
    4.3.2022
    The pleasure of doing: 30 years of folk music studies 
    30 years of folk music studies and study programs at the University Mozarteum: Together with the Lucerne School of Music, teachers and students of the University Mozarteum go on a search for traces between yodel and yodel, tradition and new trends.
    News
  • Big Christmas Carol Sing Along Choir Concert with 150 Students
    1.12.2022
    Big Christmas Carol Sing Along Choir Concert with 150 Students 
    Since October 2022, the Moz-Art-Zone has been offering an interdisciplinary music and art education program that arouses enthusiasm and interest among students and opens the doors of the university wide for this purpose. On November 30, 2022, the first large Christmas Carol Sing Along choir concert took place with 150 Salzburg students.
    News
  • Excellent Master Theses 2020/21
    1.9.2022
    Excellent Master Theses 2020/21 
    Awards for excellent master theses 2020/2021 Since the academic year 2016/2017, the Mozarteum University has been awarding the "Prize for excellent master theses". This award recognizes outstanding theses of graduates who dedicate themselves to their chosen topics in an innovative, original, unusual or particularly sustainable way. The winners of the excellent master theses 2020/2021 are: Caroline Fritz (MA IGP Guitar - Classical): "Slavko Avsenik und seine Original Oberkrainer: Untersuchung von Herkunft und Einflüsse mit der Analyse ausgewählter Beispiele" (scientific work, supervisor: Franz Zaunschirm) Pavle Krstic (MA Piano Soloist Training - Concert): "Analyse als Mittel der Interpretation der Préludes op.28 von Chopin" (scientific work, supervisor: Barbara Dobretsberger) We congratulate you!
    News
  • Award for Excellent Master Theses 2021/22
    8.8.2023
    Award for Excellent Master Theses 2021/22 
    The winners of the excellent master theses 2021/2022 are Patric Pletzenauer, Franziska Schneider, Tamara Obermayr and Friederike Klek - congratulations!
    News
  • Award for Excellent Master Theses 2022/23
    3.9.2024
    Award for Excellent Master Theses 2022/23 
    The winners of the excellent Master's theses 2022/2023 are Viktoria Anna Hirschhuber, Christiaan Josef Willemse, Giorgio Musolesi and Iris Vonolfen - congratulations!
    News
  • MA in Vocal Studies in Early Music
    Music
    MA in Vocal Studies in Early Music 
    Study program
  • Postgraduate Certificate in Viola da Gamba / Violone
    Music
    Postgraduate Certificate in Viola da Gamba / Violone 
    Study program
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