The Building of the House, op. 79 is an "overture with or without chorus" by Benjamin Britten written in 1967.
The overture is notable for the use of Asian-influenced heterophony.[1]
Text
The optional text is taken from Psalm 127, adapted by Imogen Holst from The Whole Book of Psalms (set in English). It is set using the chorale melody "Vater unser im Himmelreich". In performance the chorale can be sung by a choir or played on the organ.
History
The piece was written for the inauguration of the Snape Maltings concert hall, which took place in June 1967.[2] This has been described as the first performance,[3] although it was played at the opening of the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London which took place earlier the same year.[4]Constantin Silvestri introduced the work to Bournemouth, conducting the BSO in a performance on November 23, 1967.
The Building of the House, which had not been played in the Snape Maltings Concert Hall since the 1987 Aldeburgh Festival, was again performed there for the 2017 Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts, marking the fiftieth anniversary of the composition.
The piece was played in 2018 by Chineke!, a BME orchestra in residence at the South Bank, in a concert to mark the reopening of the Queen Elizabeth Hall after refurbishment.[6]
^Mervyn Cooke. Britten and the Far East: Asian Influences in the Music of Benjamin Britten 1998 0851158307 "Heterophony is also prominent in the 1967 overture The Building of the House"
^"Chineke! Orchestra". Southbank Centre. Retrieved 31 March 2018. With Britten's celebratory The Building of the House we remember that Britten conducted at the opening concert of the QEH in 1967