Giacomo Puccini / Franco Alfano (arr.): Turandot - Sheet music | Carus-Verlag

Giacomo Puccini / Franco Alfano (arr.) Turandot

Dramma lirico in tre atti e cinque quadri. Finale: Franco Alfano (II) SC 91, 1923/24

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With his unfinished fairy-tale opera Turandot Giacomo Puccini has left a couple of riddles to posterity. First of all the work, which had its premiere after Puccini’s death, lacks a complete ending. Furthermore, practical adjustments and corrections usually added by the composer in the course of a scenic production or after the work’s premiere, are missing, too. Thus Turandot has become a work, to which, in the course of time, many errors and inconsistencies have been added.

Carus now offers a modern edition of Turandot with a focus on aspects of practical performance: clearly organized performance material with a musical text free from traditional errors and inconsistencies, with added performance instructions (where necessary), and with consistent articulation and dynamics. This new edition has been created by the Italian conductor and musicologist Andreas Gies.

The Alfano Finale: created under pressure

This edition concludes with the standard second version of the finale by Franco Alfano (1926). Following Puccini’s death, his publisher faced the problem of finding a composer to complete the opera. They ultimately chose Alfano, who was already familiar with exotic subject matter and had a personal connection to Puccini.

Alfano initially developed a detailed first version for the end of the opera, in which Turandot’s psychological transformation unfolds in logical steps. However, Arturo Toscanini, who conducted the premiere in Milan, rejected it as being too long and too “personal.” He felt that Alfano’s own style was overly dominant. Under immense time pressure, Alfano had to make substantial cuts and rewrite about two-thirds of the music, resulting in the second version.

At the world premiere on April 25, 1926, Toscanini stopped the performance after Liù’s death. It was not until the following evening that Alfano’s second finale was heard – a solution that has since become standard at most opera houses.

The corresponding performance materials are available on hire.

Purchase
Vocal score, for hire Carus 56.203/03 DIN A4 Provisionally available from 11/2026
Full score, for hire, foreword in German, English and Italian Carus 56.203/00 456 pages, 25,2 x 35,0 cm, paperback Provisionally available from 11/2026
Set of parts, complete orchestral parts, for hire, also available in digital form Carus 56.203/19 899 pages, 23 x 32 cm Provisionally available from 11/2026
Full score digital (download), pdf file, for hire Carus 56.203/00-010-000 414 pages, 25,2 x 35,0 cm Provisionally available from 11/2026
Vocal score digital (download), pdf file, for hire Carus 56.203/03-010-000 Provisionally available from 11/2026
The unknown Prince Calaf arrives in Beijing, where he is reunited with his long-lost father Timur, accompanied by the slave girl Liù. The imperial city is ruled by the ruthless Princess Turandot. She is courted by princes eager to marry her. Turandot’s condition for giving her consent: the suitor must solve three riddles. Those who fail are executed. Despite all warnings, Calaf falls in love with Turandot and accepts the challenge. He solves all three riddles, much to the princess’s dismay, yet she still refuses to marry him. Calaf then offers her a riddle of his own: if she can discover his name by dawn, she may kill him. Turandot commands the entire population to search for the stranger’s name on threat of death. In the process, Timur and Liù are captured. To protect Calaf, Liù claims to be the only one who knows his name. Under torture, she remains steadfastly silent. She confesses her secret love for Calaf before taking her own life. Calaf now kisses the reluctant Turandot and voluntarily reveals his name to her, placing himself entirely at her mercy. As dawn breaks, Turandot proclaims before the assembled people that the stranger’s name is ‘Love’ and accepts Calaf as her partner.
  • Giacomo Puccini came from a dynasty of church musicians who worked in the Tuscan city of Lucca. His Messa a 4 con orchestra, premiered there in 1880, seemed to point him toward a career in the same direction, but directly after this, he went to Milan Conservatoire with the aim of becoming an opera composer. His only independent orchestral works were written there as student works – the Preludio sinfonico (1882) and Capriccio sinfonico (1883), as well as some of his 16 complete surviving songs for voice and piano (Canti), which he composed, with frequent references to his operas, almost throughout his career. He achieved a breakthrough as an opera composer with Manon Lescaut (1893); between 1893 and 1904 he composed La Bohème, Tosca and Madama Butterfly, which remain his most frequently-performed works today. In recent years there has been a growing realisation that Puccini's entire output requires reappraisal. And so, he has increasingly come to be understood as a musician searching for a way forward into the modern age. Personal details

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