From Old Spice to X Factor, a certain three minutes of Carmina Burana is known to many of us. But what of the rest of the work? Here’s our guide, and some best recordings

By Jeremy Pound

Published: Wednesday, 04 October 2023 at 07:57 AM


Here’s a guide to Carmina Burana, Carl Orff’s colourful, boisterous, Medieval-set cantata from 1935-36, plus a selection of the work’s best recordings.

Who was Carl Orff?

Born into a military family in Munich in 1895, Carl Orff showed an aptitude for music at an early age. After serving in World War I, where he narrowly survived when a trench caved in, he began his musical career in earnest at opera houses in Mannheim and Darmstadt.

From the mid-1920s, he devoted himself to music education, co-founding the Günther-Schule for gymnastics, music and dance in Munich with Dorothee Günther and, in 1930, sharing his methods in the publication Schulwerk.

Though Orff himself said his composing career proper began with Carmina Burana in 1937, it would also prove the peak of his popularity. Required to go through denazification after World War II, he continued to live in Germany until his death in 1982.

Where does ‘O Fortuna’ come from?

‘I’ve amused myself making a list of composers who became famous for the least amount of music,’ wrote pianist Marc-André Hamelin on Twitter. ‘So far my winners are Orff (about three minutes, and y’all know which)…’ One could, of course, respond that Orff also wrote the widely familiar ‘Gassenhauer’ from Schulwerk.

However, for all the millions that might recognise this cheery xylophone and timpani piece from the films Badlands, True Romance and countless TV programmes, few know what it is called, let alone who wrote it. Perhaps Hamelin has a point?

The ‘three minutes’ he is referring to is the shattering ‘O Fortuna’ chorus that appears at the start and end of Carmina Burana. Whether you picture its belted-out chords and pounded timpani accompanying an intrepid surfer in an Old Spice advert or Simon Cowell and co striding onto the X Factor stage may well depend on your age.

Others may recognise it from Enigma’s 1999 song ‘Gravity of Love’, though those associating it with The Omen are victims of popular misconception – it never in fact appears in the 1976 thriller’s score.