Difference between revisions of "The Flower Queen, or The Coronation of the Rose"

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''[[The Flower Queen, or The Coronation of the Rose]]'' is a cantata in two parts with a libretto by Frances Jane Crosby (1820-1915)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny_Crosby] and a score by George Frederick Root (1820-1895)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Frederick_Root].
 
''[[The Flower Queen, or The Coronation of the Rose]]'' is a cantata in two parts with a libretto by Frances Jane Crosby (1820-1915)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny_Crosby] and a score by George Frederick Root (1820-1895)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Frederick_Root].
  
Written as a work for teenage girls, it is usually described as a "popular operetta" demonstrative of nineteenth-century American romanticism. The Libretto tells of an old man who has become tired of the world and wishes to become a hermit, but as he is about to retreat to his hut, he is intrigued to hear a chorus singing "Who shall be queen of the flowers?". Thus, when called on to judge a contest of flowers, the rose he chooses for her beauty persuades him to return to the world and to his duty.[]
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Written as a work for teenage girls, it is usually described as a "popular operetta" demonstrative of nineteenth-century American romanticism. The Libretto tells of an old man who has become tired of the world and wishes to become a hermit, but as he is about to retreat to his hut, he is intrigued to hear a chorus singing "Who shall be queen of the flowers?" and comes upon a contest by flowers and is asked to choose the Queen. He picks the rose for her beauty and  she in turn persuades him to return to the world and to his duty.[]
  
 
The cantata was first performed by the young ladies of Jacob Abbott's Springer Institute on March 11, 1853, followed by a performance by Root's students at the Rutgers Female Institute. Performed an estimated 1,000 times throughout the United States in the first four years after its publication.   
 
The cantata was first performed by the young ladies of Jacob Abbott's Springer Institute on March 11, 1853, followed by a performance by Root's students at the Rutgers Female Institute. Performed an estimated 1,000 times throughout the United States in the first four years after its publication.   
  
  
F.C.L. Bosman (1980) wrongly has the composer as "George F. Boot".
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[[F.C.L. Bosman]] (1980:p287) mistakenly gives the composer's name as "George F. Boot".
  
First 1852)
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The libretto was first published in New York by Mason Brothers in 1853, 
 
The musical score also printed in London by Bayley and​ Ferguson in 1864.  
 
The musical score also printed in London by Bayley and​ Ferguson in 1864.  
  

Revision as of 06:46, 28 December 2019

The Flower Queen, or The Coronation of the Rose is a cantata in two parts with a libretto by Frances Jane Crosby (1820-1915)[1] and a score by George Frederick Root (1820-1895)[2].

Written as a work for teenage girls, it is usually described as a "popular operetta" demonstrative of nineteenth-century American romanticism. The Libretto tells of an old man who has become tired of the world and wishes to become a hermit, but as he is about to retreat to his hut, he is intrigued to hear a chorus singing "Who shall be queen of the flowers?" and comes upon a contest by flowers and is asked to choose the Queen. He picks the rose for her beauty and she in turn persuades him to return to the world and to his duty.[]

The cantata was first performed by the young ladies of Jacob Abbott's Springer Institute on March 11, 1853, followed by a performance by Root's students at the Rutgers Female Institute. Performed an estimated 1,000 times throughout the United States in the first four years after its publication.


F.C.L. Bosman (1980:p287) mistakenly gives the composer's name as "George F. Boot".

The libretto was first published in New York by Mason Brothers in 1853, The musical score also printed in London by Bayley and​ Ferguson in 1864.


https://trove.nla.gov.au/version/173055652

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny_Crosby

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Frederick_Root