Opera (Music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Opera (Music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM opera (music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM opera opera, a staged drama set to music in its entirety, made up of vocal pieces Table of Contents Introduction The early history The role of Florence Intermedi in the Florentine musical theatre Civic humanism Music in the Florentine cosmos Monteverdi Venetian opera Development of operatic styles in other Italian cities Comic opera Early opera in France and England Early opera in Germany and Austria France, 1752–1815 From the “reform” to grand opera The “reform” Viennese masters Italy in the first half of the 19th century Grand opera and beyond French grand opera The cast of Giuseppe Verdi’s Aida acknowledging applause at the end of their German Romantic opera performance at La Scala, Milan, 2006. Verdi Marco Brescia—Teatro alla Scala/AP Wagner Later opera in France Later opera in Italy with instrumental accompaniment and usually with orchestral overtures Russian opera and interludes. In some operas the music is continuous throughout an act; Later opera in Germany and Austria in others it is broken up into discrete pieces, or “numbers,” separated either Czechoslovakia and other eastern European by recitative (a dramatic type of singing that approaches speech) or by countries spoken dialogue. This article focuses on opera in the Western tradition. For Spain an overview of opera and operalike traditions in Asia (particularly in China), United Kingdom see the appropriate sections of Chinese music, Japanese music, South Asian United States arts, and Southeast Asian arts; see also short entries on specific forms of Chinese opera, such as chuanqi, jingxi, kunqu, and nanxi. The English word opera is an abbreviation of the Italian phrase opera in musica (“work in music”). It denotes a theatrical work consisting of a dramatic text, or libretto (“booklet”), that has been set to music and staged with scenery, costumes, and movement. Aside from solo, ensemble, and choral singers onstage and a group of instrumentalists playing offstage, the performers of opera since its inception have often included dancers. A complex, often costly variety of musico-dramatic entertainment, opera has attracted both supporters and detractors throughout its history and has sometimes been the target of intense criticism. Its detractors have viewed it as an artificial and irrational art form that defies dramatic verisimilitude. Supporters have seen it as more than the sum of its parts, with the music supporting and intensifying the lyrics and action to create a genre of greater emotional impact than either music or drama could achieve on its own. In his 1986 autobiography, stage and film director Franco Zeffirelli warned against taking opera too literally: Short men in armour and large ladies in Scene from a 2005 performance of Philip Glass’s Waiting for the Barbarians featuring chiffon singing about ancient Egypt don’t Richard Salter, in Erfurt, Ger. http://www.britannica.com/print/topic/429776 Page 1 of 22 opera (music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM AP make much sense at one level [but] they can…reveal to us the confusions of emotion and loyalty, the nature of power and pity, that could not be so movingly expressed in any other way. The preparation of an opera performance involves the work of many individuals whose total contributions sometimes spread across a century or more. The first, often unintentional, recruit is likely the writer of the original story. Then comes the librettist, who puts the story or play into a form—usually involving poetic verse—that is suitable for musical setting and singing. The composer then sets that libretto to music. Architects and acousticians will have designed an opera house suited or adaptable to performances that demand a sizable stage; a large backstage area to house the scenery; a “pit,” or space (often below the level of the stage) to accommodate an orchestra; and seating for a reasonably large audience. A producer (or director) has to specify the work of designers, scene painters, costumers, and lighting experts. The producer, conductor, and musical staff must work for long periods with the chorus, dancers, orchestra, and extras as well as the principal singers to prepare the performance—work that may last anywhere from a Performer’s view of the interior of the Metropolitan Opera House, New York City. few days to many months. All of this activity, Bettmann/Corbis moreover, takes place in conjunction with the work not only of researchers and editors who painstakingly prepare the musical score, especially in the case of revivals of works long forgotten or published long ago, but also of the theatre’s administrative staff, which includes the impresario and others responsible for bookings, ticket sales, and other business matters. http://www.britannica.com/print/topic/429776 Page 2 of 22 opera (music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM One of the most variable facets of opera during its long history has been the balance struck between music and poetry or text. The collaborators of the first operas (in the early 17th century) believed they were creating a new genre in which music and poetry, in order to serve the drama, were fused into an inseparable whole, a language that was in a class of its own—midway between speaking and singing. In the decades and centuries that followed, the balance between these elements repeatedly shifted to favour the music at the expense of the text and the integrity of the drama, only to be brought back into relative equilibrium by various “reforms.” More than one desirable balance between music, text, and drama is possible, however, and over time the aesthetic ideals of opera and its creators have successfully adapted to the changing tastes and attitudes of patrons and audiences, while also accommodating linguistic diversity and assorted national preferences. As a result, opera has endured in Western culture for more than 400 years. Moreover, since the late 20th century, new ways of delivering opera to the public—on video and DVD, in cinematography, or via high- definition simulcast in movie theatres—have increasingly made the genre more accessible to a larger audience, and such novelties will inevitably change public attitudes and appreciation of the art form. It remains to be seen, however, how these media might also change the way in which composers, librettists, impresarios, and performers approach opera, and whether the genre’s musical and theatrical Juan Diego Flórez performing in Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto, 2008. values will consequently be altered in fundamental ways. Karel Navarro/AP The early history Music historians have continued to debate opera’s ancestry. The plays of the ancient Greek dramatists Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides combined poetic drama and music. During the Middle Ages, biblical dramas that were chanted or interspersed with music were known under various labels, including liturgical dramas (ordines) and similar plays performed in church. These and related musico-dramatic forms may have become indirect ancestors of opera, but the earliest universally accepted direct ancestors of opera appeared in 16th-century Italy. The role of Florence The courts of northern Italy, especially that of the Medici family in Florence, were particularly important for the development of opera. Indeed, Florence became the birthplace of opera at the end of the century, as the result of the confluence of three cultural forces: an established theatrical tradition, a strong sense of civic humanism, and a distinctly Florentine view of music and http://www.britannica.com/print/topic/429776 Page 3 of 22 opera (music) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia 2014/08/19 3:10 PM music’s relation to the cosmos. INTERMEDI IN THE FLORENTINE MUSICAL THEATRE Foremost among the factors that made 16th-century Florence ripe for the advent of opera was its long tradition of musical theatre, manifested principally in the musical productions known as intermedi (or interludes) that were staged between the acts of spoken plays. Intermedi served both to signal the divisions of the spoken drama, since there was no curtain to be dropped, and to suggest the passage of time by suspending the action between one act of the play and the next and, during the interval, by employing characters and themes unrelated to the main plot and only loosely connected from one interlude to another. The Florentine court offered lavish intermedi, planned and rehearsed months in advance and intended to impress invited guests with the wealth, generosity, and power of their Medici hosts. For the so-called 1589 intermedi, which climaxed a monthlong series of events to celebrate the marriage of Grand Duke Ferdinando de’ Medici (Ferdinand I) of Tuscany to the French princess Christine of Lorraine, a huge team of artists, artisans, poets, musicians, architects, and technicians was assembled under the intellectual guidance of the prominent Florentine aristocrat Giovanni Bardi. As the moving spirit behind the program, Bardi worked closely with local poets and musicians—some of whom were involved in the first experimental opera productions a decade later. In fact, the 1589 intermedi had many of the same players and almost all the ingredients of opera—costumes, scenery, stage effects, enthralling solo singing, colourful instrumental music, large-scale numbers combining voices and orchestra, and dance. Yet to be created, however, were the unified action and the innovative style of dramatic singing that have remained among the hallmarks of opera. CIVIC HUMANISM The second reason Florence became the cradle of opera was the city’s rich history of “civic humanism,” a term coined in the 20th century to refer specifically to the involvement of the educated citizens of Florence in the revival of Greek and Roman Classical culture. Facilitated by a network of formal and informal academies, Florentine intellectuals engaged in study and discussion of the Greek and Latin literature of the ancients.
Recommended publications
  • Edith Mathis Mozart | Bartók | Brahms | Schumann | Strauss Selected Lieder Karl Engel Wolfgang Amadé Mozart (1756–1791) Robert Schumann (1810–1897) Das Veilchen K
    HISTORIC PERFORMANCES Edith Mathis Mozart | Bartók | Brahms | Schumann | Strauss Selected Lieder Karl Engel Wolfgang Amadé Mozart (1756–1791) Robert Schumann (1810–1897) Das Veilchen K. 476 2:47 Nine Lieder from Myrthen, Op. 25 Als Luise die Briefe ihres ungetreuen Liebhabers verbrannte K. 520 1:41 Widmung 2:11 Abendempfindung an Laura K. 523 4:45 Der Nussbaum 3:27 Dans un bois solitaire K. 308 (295b) 2:54 Jemand 1:36 Der Zauberer K. 472 2:48 Lied der Braut I («Mutter, Mutter, glaube nicht») 2:01 Lied der Braut II («Lass mich ihm am Busen hängen») 1:34 Béla Bartók (1881–1945) Lied der Suleika («Wie mit innigstem Behagen») 2:48 Village Scenes. Slovak Folksongs, Sz. 78 Im Westen 1:16 Was will die einsame Thräne 2:59 Heuernte 1:33 Hauptmanns Weib 1:55 Bei der Braut 1:57 Hochzeit 3:30 Wiegenlied 5:03 Richard Strauss (1864–1949) Burschentanz 2:47 Schlechtes Wetter, Op. 69 No. 5 2:29 Die Nacht, Op. 10 No. 3 2:55 Johannes Brahms (1833–1897) Ach, Lieb, ich muss nun scheiden, Op. 21 No. 3 2:08 Five Songs from 42 Deutsche Volkslieder, WoO 33 Meinem Kinde, Op. 37 No. 3 2:19 Hat gesagt – bleibt’s nicht dabei, Op. 36 No. 3 2:31 Erlaube mir, feins Mädchen 1:15 In stiller Nacht 3:12 encore announcement: Edith Mathis 0:10 Wie komm’ ich denn zur Tür herein? 2:19 Da unten im Tale 2:29 Hugo Wolf (1860–1903) Feinsliebchen, du sollst 4:14 Auch kleine Dinge können uns entzücken from the Italienisches Liederbuch 2:42 recorded live at LUCERNE FESTIVAL (Internationale Musikfestwochen Luzern) Edith Mathis soprano Previously unreleased Karl Engel piano The voice of music The soprano Edith Mathis According to an artist feature of the soprano Edith Mathis, published by the music maga- zine Fono Forum in 1968, an engagement at the New York Met was a “Pour le Mérite” for a singer.
    [Show full text]
  • The Songs of the Beggar's Opera
    Eastern Illinois University The Keep Masters Theses Student Theses & Publications 1966 The onS gs of The Beggar's Opera Carolyn Anfinson Eastern Illinois University This research is a product of the graduate program in Music at Eastern Illinois University. Find out more about the program. Recommended Citation Anfinson, Carolyn, "The onS gs of The Beggar's Opera" (1966). Masters Theses. 4265. https://thekeep.eiu.edu/theses/4265 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Theses & Publications at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PAPER CERTIFICATE #3 To: Graduate Degree Candidates who have written formal theses. Subject: Permission to reproduce theses. The University Library is receiving a number of requests from other institutions asking permission to reproduce dissertations for inclusion in their library holdings. Although no copyright laws are involved, we feel that professional courtesy demands that permission be obtained from the author before we allow theses to be copied. Please sign one of the following statements. Booth Library of Eastern Illinois University has my permission to lend my thesis to a reputable college or university for the purpose of copying it for inclusion in that institutionts library or research holdings. Date I respectfully request Booth Library of Eastern Illinois University not allow my thesis be reproduced because Date Author THE SONGS OF THE BEGGAR'S OPERA (TITLE) BY Carolyn Anfinson THESIS SUBMIITTD IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF M.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Il Favore Degli Dei (1690): Meta-Opera and Metamorphoses at the Farnese Court
    chapter 4 Il favore degli dei (1690): Meta-Opera and Metamorphoses at the Farnese Court Wendy Heller In 1690, Giovanni Maria Crescimbeni (1663–1728) and Gian Vincenzo Gravina (1664–1718), along with several of their literary colleagues, established the Arcadian Academy in Rome. Railing against the excesses of the day, their aim was to restore good taste and classical restraint to poetry, art, and opera. That same year, a mere 460 kilometres away, the Farnese court in Parma offered an entertainment that seemed designed to flout the precepts of these well- intentioned reformers.1 For the marriage of his son Prince Odoardo Farnese (1666–1693) to Dorothea Sofia of Neuberg (1670–1748), Duke Ranuccio II Farnese (1639–1694) spared no expense, capping off the elaborate festivities with what might well be one of the longest operas ever performed: Il favore degli dei, a ‘drama fantastico musicale’ with music by Bernardo Sabadini (d. 1718) and poetry by the prolific Venetian librettist Aurelio Aureli (d. 1718).2 Although Sabadini’s music does not survive, we are left with a host of para- textual materials to tempt the historical imagination. Aureli’s printed libretto, which includes thirteen engravings, provides a vivid sense of a production 1 The object of Crescimbeni’s most virulent condemnation was Giacinto Andrea Cicognini’s Giasone (1649), set by Francesco Cavalli, which Crescimbeni both praised as a most per- fect drama and condemned for bringing about the downfall of the genre. Mario Giovanni Crescimbeni, La bellezza della volgar poesia spiegata in otto dialoghi (Rome: Buagni, 1700), Dialogo iv, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • The Art of Music :A Comprehensive Ilbrar
    1wmm H?mi BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT or Hetirg W, Sage 1891 A36:66^a, ' ?>/m7^7 9306 Cornell University Library ML 100.M39 V.9 The art of music :a comprehensive ilbrar 3 1924 022 385 342 Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022385342 THE ART OF MUSIC The Art of Music A Comprehensive Library of Information for Music Lovers and Musicians Editor-in-Chief DANIEL GREGORY MASON Columbia UniveTsity Associate Editors EDWARD B. HILL LELAND HALL Harvard University Past Professor, Univ. of Wisconsin Managing Editor CESAR SAERCHINGER Modem Music Society of New Yoric In Fourteen Volumes Profusely Illustrated NEW YORK THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC Lillian Nordica as Briinnhilde After a pholo from life THE ART OF MUSIC: VOLUME NINE The Opera Department Editor: CESAR SAERCHINGER Secretary Modern Music Society of New York Author, 'The Opera Since Wagner,' etc. Introduction by ALFRED HERTZ Conductor San Francisco Symphony Orchestra Formerly Conductor Metropolitan Opera House, New York NEW YORK THE NASTIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC i\.3(ft(fliji Copyright, 1918. by THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF MUSIC, Inc. [All Bights Reserved] THE OPERA INTRODUCTION The opera is a problem—a problem to the composer • and to the audience. The composer's problem has been in the course of solution for over three centuries and the problem of the audience is fresh with every per- formance.
    [Show full text]
  • Transatlantic Crossings in J989
    SNEAK PREVIEW'S AND TRANSATLANTIC CROSSINGS IN J989 BY ELLEN LAMPERT he Welsh National Opera rang in the Richard Peduzzi, whose design collaboration New York with its American debut at with Patrice Chereau stretches over the past twenty the Brooklyn Academy of Music in years, is already at work on the decor for Cher­ • February with Peter Stein's production eau 's production of Mozart's Don Giovanni, Designer Reinhard Heinrich, Tof Falstaff. With sets designed by Lucio Fanti, who scheduled to open the new French Opera House at who recently made his direc­ also designed Stein's WNO production of Othello, the Bastille in January 1990. The building, cur­ torial debut with the Nether­ and costumes by Moidele Bickel, the production rently under construction, will host a concert on lands Opera production of was filmed in Cardiff by the BBC for an airdate la­ July 14, as a sentimental offering to this year's bi­ The Damnation ofFaust, will centennial celebration of the French Revolution, direct and design Lulu ter in 1989. (model, I) for the Heidelburg New productions on the Welsh National Opera's but full-staged productions are not scheduled until Theatre. Opening is set for 1989 home schedule include Mozart's Seraglio, di­ 1990. May89. rected by Giles Havergal, with sets and costumes by Back in Germany, Reinhold Daberto, from Russell Craig, who also designed the WNO/Mozart Acoustic Biihnentechnik, is overseeing extens ive The Marriage of Figaro. This production debuts renovations of the stage machinery at the Munich • on March 11 , to be followed in May with La Son­ Opera.
    [Show full text]
  • Professor Niecks on Melodrama Author(S): Frederick Niecks Source: the Musical Times and Singing Class Circular, Vol
    Professor Niecks on Melodrama Author(s): Frederick Niecks Source: The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular, Vol. 42, No. 696 (Feb. 1, 1901), pp. 96-97 Published by: Musical Times Publications Ltd. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3366388 . Accessed: 21/12/2014 00:58 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Musical Times Publications Ltd. is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 128.235.251.160 on Sun, 21 Dec 2014 00:58:46 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions L - g6 THE MUSICAL TIMES.-FEBRUARY I, I901. of any service is, of course, always undesirable. musical society as well as choir inspectorand con- But it is permissible to remind our young and ductor to the Church Choral Association for the enthusiastic present-day cathedral organists that the Archdeaconryof Coventry. In I898 he became rich store of music left to us by our old English church organistand masterof the choristersof Canterbury composers should not be passed by, even on Festival Cathedral,in succession to Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Iolanta Bluebeard's Castle
    iolantaPETER TCHAIKOVSKY AND bluebeard’sBÉLA BARTÓK castle conductor Iolanta Valery Gergiev Lyric opera in one act production Libretto by Modest Tchaikovsky, Mariusz Treliński based on the play King René’s Daughter set designer by Henrik Hertz Boris Kudlička costume designer Bluebeard’s Castle Marek Adamski Opera in one act lighting designer Marc Heinz Libretto by Béla Balázs, after a fairy tale by Charles Perrault choreographer Tomasz Wygoda Saturday, February 14, 2015 video projection designer 12:30–3:45 PM Bartek Macias sound designer New Production Mark Grey dramaturg The productions of Iolanta and Bluebeard’s Castle Piotr Gruszczyński were made possible by a generous gift from Ambassador and Mrs. Nicholas F. Taubman general manager Peter Gelb Additional funding was received from Mrs. Veronica Atkins; Dr. Magdalena Berenyi, in memory of Dr. Kalman Berenyi; music director and the National Endowment for the Arts James Levine principal conductor Co-production of the Metropolitan Opera and Fabio Luisi Teatr Wielki–Polish National Opera The 5th Metropolitan Opera performance of PETER TCHAIKOVSKY’S This performance iolanta is being broadcast live over The Toll Brothers– Metropolitan Opera International Radio Network, sponsored conductor by Toll Brothers, Valery Gergiev America’s luxury in order of vocal appearance homebuilder®, with generous long-term marta duke robert support from Mzia Nioradze Aleksei Markov The Annenberg iol anta vaudémont Foundation, The Anna Netrebko Piotr Beczala Neubauer Family Foundation, the brigit te Vincent A. Stabile Katherine Whyte Endowment for Broadcast Media, l aur a and contributions Cassandra Zoé Velasco from listeners bertr and worldwide. Matt Boehler There is no alméric Toll Brothers– Keith Jameson Metropolitan Opera Quiz in List Hall today.
    [Show full text]
  • Ce Théâtre De L'opéra-Comique, Vous Savez À Quel État
    REVUE DES DEUX MONDES , 15th July 1882, pp. 453-466. Ce théâtre de l’Opéra-Comique, vous savez à quel état d’abaissement nous le vîmes réduit il y a quelques années. Eh bien! allez maintenant vous y promener par un beau soir des Noces de Figaro [Le Nozze di Figaro ] ou de Joseph et vous m’en direz des nouvelles. Ce que peuvent pourtant l’initiative et la volonté d’un chef habile! Où les autres n’ont connu que la ruine il crée la vie et l’abondance, taille en plein dans le neuf et dans le vieux, évoque, suscite, se recueille et se disperse, en un mot, travaille si bien que la veine qu’on croyait perdue à jamais se retrouve. Les malveillans s’écrient : « C’est un faiseur! » Oui, faiseur de troupes, aptitude singulière d’un homme que tous s’entêtent à n’envisager que par le côté de la chance et de la fortune quand c’est, au contraire, sur sa capacité qu’il faudrait insister. A cette heure que les directions de théâtre jusqu’alors les mieux pourvues voient leurs ensembles se désagréger, il réussit, lui, à se procurer une troupe excellente ; que dis-je? une troupe, il en a deux : la troupe d’opéra comique proprement dit, M. Taskin, M. Fugère, M. Bertin, M. Nicod, Mlle Ducasse, pour jouer le répertoire courant, et la troupe lyrique pour chanter Mozart et Méhul : M. Talazac, M me Carvalho, M me Vauchelet, M lle Van Zandt, M lle Isaac, une âme et une voix, la première aujourd’hui parmi les jeunes et qui déjà serait à l’Opéra si M.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Opera Service Bulletin
    CENTRAL OPERA SERVICE BULLETIN WINTER, 1972 Sponsored by the Metropolitan Opera National Council Central Opera Service • Lincoln Center Plaza • Metropolitan Opera • New York, N.Y. 10023 • 799-3467 Sponsored by the Metropolitan Opera National Council Central Opera Service • Lincoln Canter Plaza • Metropolitan Opera • New York, NX 10023 • 799.3467 CENTRAL OPERA SERVICE COMMITTEE ROBERT L. B. TOBIN, National Chairman GEORGE HOWERTON, National Co-Chairman National Council Directors MRS. AUGUST BELMONT MRS. FRANK W. BOWMAN MRS. TIMOTHY FISKE E. H. CORRIGAN, JR. CARROLL G. HARPER MRS. NORRIS DARRELL ELIHU M. HYNDMAN Professional Committee JULIUS RUDEL, Chairman New York City Opera KURT HERBERT ADLER MRS. LOUDON MEI.LEN San Francisco Opera Opera Soc. of Wash., D.C. VICTOR ALESSANDRO ELEMER NAGY San Antonio Symphony Ham College of Music ROBERT G. ANDERSON MME. ROSE PALMAI-TENSER Tulsa Opera Mobile Opera Guild WILFRED C. BAIN RUSSELL D. PATTERSON Indiana University Kansas City Lyric Theater ROBERT BAUSTIAN MRS. JOHN DEWITT PELTZ Santa Fe Opera Metropolitan Opera MORITZ BOMHARD JAN POPPER Kentucky Opera University of California, L.A. STANLEY CHAPPLE GLYNN ROSS University of Washington Seattle Opera EUGENE CONLEY GEORGE SCHICK No. Texas State Univ. Manhattan School of Music WALTER DUCLOUX MARK SCHUBART University of Texas Lincoln Center PETER PAUL FUCHS MRS. L. S. STEMMONS Louisiana State University Dallas Civic Opera ROBERT GAY LEONARD TREASH Northwestern University Eastman School of Music BORIS GOLDOVSKY LUCAS UNDERWOOD Goldovsky Opera Theatre University of the Pacific WALTER HERBERT GIDEON WALDKOh Houston & San Diego Opera Juilliard School of Music RICHARD KARP MRS. J. P. WALLACE Pittsburgh Opera Shreveport Civic Opera GLADYS MATHEW LUDWIG ZIRNER Community Opera University of Illinois See COS INSIDE INFORMATION on page seventeen for new officers and members of the Professional Committee.
    [Show full text]
  • Die Mythologischen Musikdramen Des Frühen 17. Jahrhunderts: Eine Gattungshistorische Untersuchung
    Die mythologischen Musikdramen des frühen 17. Jahrhunderts: eine gattungshistorische Untersuchung Dissertation zur Erlangung des Grades des Doctor der Philosophie (Dr. phil.) am Fachbereich Philosophie und Geisteswissenschaften der Freie Universität Berlin vorgelegt von Alessandra Origgi Berlin 2018 Erstgutachter: Prof. Dr. Bernhard Huss (Freie Universität Berlin) Zweitgutachter: Prof. Dr. Franz Penzenstadler (Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen) Tag der Disputation: 18.07.2018 Danksagung Mein Dank gilt vor allem meinen beiden Betreuern, Herrn Prof. Dr. Bernhard Huss (Freie Universität Berlin), der mich stets mit seinen Anregungen unterstützt und mir die Möglichkeit gegeben hat, in einem menschlich und intellektuell anregenden Arbeitsbereich zu arbeiten, und Herrn Prof. Dr. Franz Penzenstadler (Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen), der das Promotionsprojekt in meinen Tübinger Jahren angeregt und auch nach meinem Wechsel nach Berlin fachkundig und engagiert begleitet hat. Für mannigfaltige administrative und menschliche Hilfe in all den Berliner Jahren bin ich Kerstin Gesche zu besonderem Dank verpflichtet. Für die fachliche Hilfe und die freundschaftlichen Gespräche danke ich meinen Kolleginnen und Kollegen sowie den Teilnehmenden des von Professor Huss geleiteten Forschungskolloquiums an der Freien Universität Berlin: insbesondere meinen früheren Kolleginnen Maraike Di Domenica und Alice Spinelli, weiterhin Siria De Francesco, Dr. Federico Di Santo, Dr. Maddalena Graziano, Dr. Tatiana Korneeva, Thea Santangelo und Dr. Selene Vatteroni.
    [Show full text]
  • NEWSLETTER of the American Handel Society
    NEWSLETTER of The American Handel Society Volume XVIII, Number 1 April 2003 A PILGRIMAGE TO IOWA As I sat in the United Airways terminal of O’Hare International Airport, waiting for the recently bankrupt carrier to locate and then install an electric starter for the no. 2 engine, my mind kept returning to David Lodge’s description of the modern academic conference. In Small World (required airport reading for any twenty-first century academic), Lodge writes: “The modern conference resembles the pilgrimage of medieval Christendom in that it allows the participants to indulge themselves in all the pleasures and diversions of travel while appearing to be austerely bent on self-improvement.” He continues by listing the “penitential exercises” which normally accompany the enterprise, though, oddly enough, he omits airport delays. To be sure, the companionship in the terminal (which included nearly a dozen conferees) was anything but penitential, still, I could not help wondering if the delay was prophecy or merely a glitch. The Maryland Handel Festival was a tough act to follow and I, and perhaps others, were apprehensive about whether Handel in Iowa would live up to the high standards set by its august predecessor. In one way the comparison is inappropriate. By the time I started attending the Maryland conference (in the early ‘90’s), it was a first-rate operation, a Cadillac among festivals. Comparing a one-year event with a two-decade institution is unfair, though I am sure in the minds of many it was inevitable. Fortunately, I feel that the experience in Iowa compared very favorably with what many of us had grown accustomed Frontispiece from William Coxe, Anecdotes fo George Frederick Handel and John Christopher Smith to in Maryland.
    [Show full text]
  • A European Singspiel
    Columbus State University CSU ePress Theses and Dissertations Student Publications 2012 Die Zauberflöte: A urE opean Singspiel Zachary Bryant Columbus State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://csuepress.columbusstate.edu/theses_dissertations Part of the Music Commons Recommended Citation Bryant, Zachary, "Die Zauberflöte: A urE opean Singspiel" (2012). Theses and Dissertations. 116. https://csuepress.columbusstate.edu/theses_dissertations/116 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Publications at CSU ePress. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of CSU ePress. r DIE ZAUBEFL5TE: A EUROPEAN SINGSPIEL Zachary Bryant Die Zauberflote: A European Singspiel by Zachary Bryant A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of Requirements of the CSU Honors Program for Honors in the Bachelor of Arts in Music College of the Arts Columbus State University Thesis Advisor JfAAlj LtKMrkZny Date TttZfQjQ/Aj Committee Member /1^^^^^^^C^ZL^>>^AUJJ^AJ (?YUI£^"QdJu**)^-) Date ^- /-/<£ Director, Honors Program^fSs^^/O ^J- 7^—^ Date W3//±- Through modern-day globalization, the cultures of the world are shared on a daily basis and are integrated into the lives of nearly every person. This reality seems to go unnoticed by most, but the fact remains that many individuals and their societies have formed a cultural identity from the combination of many foreign influences. Such a multicultural identity can be seen particularly in music. Composers, artists, and performers alike frequently seek to incorporate separate elements of style in their own identity. One of the earliest examples of this tradition is the German Singspiel.
    [Show full text]