The cantata, completed in March 1959, was written for the 500th anniversary of the University of Basel on 1 July the following year.[2] The Latin text, which was compiled by Bernhard Wyss [de], is based on the charter of the university, as well as older orations praising Basel.[1][2] Britten wrote out the text for the work on the pages of his old preparatory-school German exercise book. He later used the same book to plan his War Requiem.[3]
The work was premiered at the University of Basel on 1 July 1960, conducted by Paul Sacher; the performers were Agnes Giebel, Elsa Cavelti, Peter Pears, Heinz Rehfuss, the Basler Kammerchor, the Sterk'scher Privatchor, and the Basler Kammerorchester.[4] The British premiered was by the Cambridge University Musical Society in November, a few months after Britten received an honorary doctorate from the University.[3]
The work is in two parts and has thirteen total sections.[4]
Pars 1
Corale
Alla rovescio
Recitative (tenor)
Arioso (bass)
Duettino (soprano and alto)
Recitative (tenor)
Scherzo
Pars 2
Tema seriale con fuga
Soli et duetto (alto and bass)
Arioso con canto popolare
Recitative (tenor)
Canone ed istinato
Corale con canto
Cantata academica is formally a work of serialism, although only on a large scale, "so tightly connected with the form that it is the form itself".[2] This reflects Britten's intention to be deliberately "clever" with the work; he noted in a letter to Wyss that the piece is "full of academic devices for the edification of the performers".[3] The final section is "but a unifying return to the opening"; each of the others has a single "ruling note", corresponding to the 12-note series of the work, which serves as an ostinato or pedal tone for the section.[2]
Adaptations
The movement Tema seriale con fuga was adapted for two 1973 compositions by Richard Rodney Bennett dedicated to Britten: a concerto for orchestra and a work called Alba for organ. It was also used as the basis for a 1963 collaborative composition by Bennett, Nicholas Maw, and Malcolm Williamson, called Reflections on a theme of Benjamin Britten.[4]