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Table of Contents
-
Introduction
-
Operatic
terminology
-
History
-
Contemporary trends
-
Operatic
voices
-
Famous
singers
-
Opera in
film
-
Enjoying
opera
Introduction
Opera is an
art form
in which
singers
and
musicians
perform a
dramatic
work combining text (called a
libretto)
and
musical
score.
Opera is part of the Western
classical
music
tradition. Opera incorporates many of the
elements of spoken theatre, such as
acting,
scenery
and
costumes
and sometimes includes dance. The performance is
typically given in an
opera house,
accompanied by an
orchestra
or smaller
musical
ensemble.
Opera started in
Italy at the end of the 16th century (with
Jacopo Peri's
lost
Dafne,
produced in
Florence
around 1597) and soon spread through the rest of
Europe:
Schütz
in Germany,
Lully
in France, and
Purcell
in England all helped to establish their
national traditions in the 17th century.
However, in the 18th century, Italian opera
continued to dominate most of Europe, except
France, attracting foreign composers such as
Handel.
Opera seria
was the most prestigious form of Italian opera,
until
Gluck
reacted against its artificiality with his
"reform" operas in the 1760s. Today the most
renowned figure of late 18th century opera is
Mozart,
who began with opera seria but is most famous
for his Italian
comic operas,
especially
The
Marriage of Figaro,
Don
Giovanni,
and
Cosě fan
tutte,
as well as
The Magic
Flute,
a landmark in the German tradition.
The first third
of the 19th century saw the highpoint of the
bel canto
style, with
Rossini,
Donizetti
and
Bellini
all creating works that are still performed
today. It also saw the advent of
Grand Opera
typified by the works of
Meyerbeer.
The mid to late 19th century is considered by
some a golden age of opera, led by
Wagner
in Germany and
Verdi
in Italy. This "golden age" developed through
the
verismo
era in Italy and contemporary
French opera
through to
Puccini
and
Strauss
in the early 20th century. During the 19th
century, parallel operatic traditions emerged in
central and eastern Europe, particularly in
Russia
and
Bohemia.
The 20th century saw many experiments with
modern styles, such as
atonality
and
serialism
(Schoenberg
and
Berg),
Neoclassicism
(Stravinsky),
and
Minimalism
(Philip
Glass
and
John Adams).
With the rise of recording technology, singers
such as
Enrico
Caruso
became known to audiences beyond the circle of
opera fans. Operas were also performed on (and
written for) radio and television.
Operatic
terminology
The words of an
opera are known as the
libretto
(literally "little book"). Some composers,
notably
Richard
Wagner,
have written their own libretti; others have
worked in close collaboration with their
librettists, e.g.
Mozart
with
Lorenzo Da
Ponte.
Traditional opera, often referred to as "number
opera,"
consists of two modes of singing:
recitative,
the plot-driving passages sung in a style
designed to imitate and emphasize the
inflections of speech, and
aria
(an "air" or formal song) in which the
characters express their emotions in a more
structured melodic style. Duets, trios and other
ensembles often occur, and choruses are used to
comment on the action. In some forms of opera,
such as
Singspiel,
opéra
comique,
operetta,
and
semi-opera,
the recitative is mostly replaced by spoken
dialogue. Melodic or semi-melodic passages
occurring in the midst of, or instead of,
recitative, are also referred to as
arioso.
During the Baroque and Classical periods,
recitative could appear in two basic forms:
secco (dry) recitative, accompanied only by
continuo,
which was usually a
harpsichord
and a cello; or accompagnato (also known
as strumentato) in which the orchestra
provided accompaniment. By the 19th century,
accompagnato had gained the upper hand, the
orchestra played a much bigger role, and
Richard
Wagner
revolutionised opera by abolishing almost all
distinction between aria and recitative in his
quest for what he termed "endless melody".
Subsequent composers have tended to follow
Wagner's example, though some, such as
Stravinsky
in his
The
Rake's Progress
have bucked the trend. The terminology of the
various kinds of operatic voices is described in
section 3
below.
History
Origins
The word
opera means "work" in Italian (it is the
plural of
Latin
opus meaning "work" or "labour")
suggesting that it combines the arts of solo and
choral singing, declamation, acting and dancing
in a staged spectacle.
Dafne
by
Jacopo Peri
was the earliest composition considered opera,
as understood today. It was written around 1597,
largely under the inspiration of an elite circle
of literate
Florentine
humanists
who gathered as the "Camerata
de' Bardi".
Significantly, Dafne was an attempt to
revive the classical
Greek drama,
part of the wider revival of antiquity
characteristic of the
Renaissance.
The members of the Camerata considered that the
"chorus" parts of Greek dramas were originally
sung, and possibly even the entire text of all
roles; opera was thus conceived as a way of
"restoring" this situation. Dafne is
unfortunately lost. A later work by Peri,
Euridice,
dating from 1600, is the first opera score to
have survived to the present day. The honour of
being the first opera still to be regularly
performed, however, goes to
Claudio
Monteverdi's
L'Orfeo,
composed for the court of
Mantua
in 1607.
Italian opera: The Baroque era
Opera did not
remain confined to court audiences for long; in
1637 the idea of a "season" (Carnival)
of publicly-attended operas supported by ticket
sales emerged in Venice. Monteverdi had moved to
the city from Mantua and composed his last
operas,
Il
ritorno d'Ulisse in patria
and
L'incoronazione di Poppea,
for the Venetian theatre in the 1640s. His most
important follower
Francesco
Cavalli
helped spread opera throughout Italy. In these
early Baroque operas, broad comedy was blended
with tragic elements in a mix that jarred some
educated sensibilities, sparking the first of
opera's many reform movements, sponsored by
Venice's Arcadian Academy which came to be
associated with the poet
Metastasio,
whose
libretti
helped crystallize the genre of
opera seria,
which became the leading form of Italian opera
until the end of the 18th century. Once the
Metastasian ideal had been firmly established,
comedy in Baroque-era opera was reserved for
what came to be called
opera buffa.
Before such
elements were forced out of opera seria, many
libretti had featured a separately unfolding
comic plot as sort of an
"opera-within-an-opera." One reason for this was
an attempt to attract members of the growing
merchant class, newly wealthy, but still less
cultured than the nobility, to the public
opera houses.
These separate plots were almost immediately
resurrected in a separately developing tradition
that partly derived from the commedia dell'arte,
(as indeed, such plots had always been) a
long-flourishing improvisitory stage tradition
of Italy. Just as intermedi had once been
performed in-between the acts of stage plays,
operas in the new comic genre of "intermezzi",
which developed largely in Naples in the 1710s
and '20s, were initially staged during the
intermissions of opera seria. They became so
popular, however, that they were soon being
offered as separate productions.
Opera seria
was elevated in tone and highly stylised in
form, usually consisting of secco
recitative interspersed with long da capo
arias. These afforded great opportunity for
virtuosic singing and during the golden age of
opera seria the singer really became the
star. The role of the hero was usually written
for the
castrato
voice; castrati such as
Farinelli
and
Senesino,
as well as female
sopranos
such as
Faustina
Bordoni,
became in great demand throughout Europe as
opera seria ruled the stage in every country
except France. Indeed, Farinelli was the most
famous singer of the 18th century. Italian opera
set the Baroque standard. Italian libretti were
the norm, even when a German composer like
Handel
found himself writing for London audiences.
Italian libretti remained dominant in the
classical
period
as well, for example in the operas of
Mozart,
who wrote in Vienna near the century's close.
Leading Italian-born composers of
opera seria
include
Alessandro
Scarlatti,
Vivaldi
and
Porpora.
Reform:
Gluck, the attack on the Metastasian ideal, and
Mozart
Opera seria
had its weaknesses and critics. The taste for
embellishment on behalf of the superbly trained
singers, and the use of spectacle as a
replacement for dramatic purity and unity drew
attacks.
Francesco
Algarotti's
Essay on the Opera (1755) proved to be an
inspiration for
Christoph
Willibald Gluck's
reforms. He advocated that opera seria
had to return to basics and that all the various
elements —music (both instrumental and vocal),
ballet, and staging— must be subservient to the
overriding drama. Several composers of the
period, including
Niccolň
Jommelli
and
Tommaso
Traetta,
attempted to put these ideals into practice. The
first to really succeed and to leave a permanent
imprint upon the history of opera, however, was
Gluck. Gluck tried to achieve a "beautiful
simplicity". This is illustrated in the first of
his "reform" operas,
Orfeo ed
Euridice,
where vocal lines lacking in the virtuosity of
(say) Handel's works are supported by simple
harmonies and a notably richer-than-usual
orchestral presence throughout.
Gluck's reforms
have had resonance throughout operatic history.
Weber, Mozart and Wagner, in particular, were
influenced by his ideals. Mozart, in many ways
Gluck's successor, combined a superb sense of
drama, harmony, melody, and counterpoint to
write a series of comedies, notably
Cosě fan
tutte,
Le Nozze
di Figaro,
and
Don
Giovanni
(in collaboration with
Lorenzo Da
Ponte)
which remain among the most-loved, popular and
well-known operas today. But Mozart's
contribution to opera seria was more
mixed; by his time it was dying away, and in
spite of such fine works as
Idomeneo
and
La
clemenza di Tito,
he would not succeed in bringing the art form
back to life again.
Bel canto,
Verdi and verismo
The
bel canto
opera movement flourished in the early 19th
century and is exemplified by the operas of
Rossini,
Bellini,
Donizetti,
Pacini,
Mercadante
and many others. Literally "beautiful singing",
bel canto opera derives from the Italian
stylistic singing school of the same name. Bel
canto lines are typically florid and intricate,
requiring supreme agility and pitch control.
Following the
bel canto era, a more direct, forceful style was
rapidly popularized by
Giuseppe
Verdi,
beginning with his biblical opera
Nabucco.
Verdi's operas resonated with the growing spirit
of Italian nationalism in the post-Napoleonic
era, and he quickly became an icon of the
patriotic movement (although his own politics
were perhaps not quite so radical). In the early
1850s, Verdi produced his three most popular
operas:
Rigoletto,
Il
trovatore
and
La
traviata.
But he continued to develop his style, composing
perhaps the greatest French
Grand Opera,
Don
Carlos,
and ending his career with two
Shakespeare-inspired
works,
Otello
and
Falstaff,
which reveal how far Italian opera had grown in
sophistication since the early 19th century.
After Verdi, the
sentimental "realistic" melodrama of
verismo
appeared in Italy. This was a style introduced
by
Pietro
Mascagni's
Cavalleria rusticana
and
Ruggero
Leoncavallo's
Pagliacci
that came virtually to dominate the world's
opera stages with such popular works as
Giacomo
Puccini's
La bohčme,
Tosca,
and
Madama
Butterfly.
Later Italian composers, such as
Berio
and
Nono,
have experimented with
modernism.
German-language opera
The first German
opera was Dafne, composed by
Heinrich
Schütz
in 1627 (the music has not survived). Italian
opera held a great sway over German-speaking
countries until the late 18th century.
Nevertheless, native forms developed too. In
1644
Sigmund
Staden
produced the first
Singspiel,
a popular form of German-language opera in which
singing alternates with spoken dialogue. In the
late 17th and early 18th centuries, the Theater
am Gänsemarkt in
Hamburg
presented German operas by
Keiser,
Telemann
and
Handel.
Yet many of the major German composers of the
time, including Handel himself, as well as
Graun,
Hasse
and later
Gluck,
chose to write most of their operas in foreign
languages, especially Italian.
Mozart's
Singspiele,
Die
Entführung aus dem Serail
(1782) and
Die
Zauberflöte
(1791) were an important breakthrough in
achieving international recognition for German
opera. The tradition was developed in the 19th
century by
Beethoven
with his
Fidelio,
inspired by the climate of the
French
Revolution.
Carl Maria
von Weber
established
German
Romantic
opera in opposition to the dominance of Italian
bel canto.
His
Der
Freischütz
(1821) shows his genius for creating a
supernatural atmosphere. Other opera composers
of the time include
Marschner,
Schubert,
Schumann
and
Lortzing,
but the most significant figure was undoubtedly
Wagner.
Wagner
was one of the most revolutionary and
controversial composers in musical history.
Starting under the influence of
Weber
and
Meyerbeer,
he gradually evolved a new concept of opera as a
Gesamtkunstwerk (a "complete work of
art"), a fusion of music, poetry and painting.
In his mature music dramas,
Tristan
und Isolde,
Die
Meistersinger von Nürnberg,
Der Ring
des Nibelungen
and
Parsifal,
he abolished the distinction between aria and
recitative in favour of a seamless flow of
"endless melody". He greatly increased the role
and power of the orchestra, creating scores with
a complex web of
leitmotivs,
recurring themes often associated with the
characters and concepts of the drama; and he was
prepared to violate accepted musical
conventions, such as
tonality,
in his quest for greater expressivity. Wagner
also brought a new philosophical dimension to
opera in his works, which were usually based on
stories from
Germanic
or
Arthurian
legend. Finally, Wagner built
his own
opera house
at
Bayreuth,
exclusively dedicated to performing his own
works in the style he wanted.
Opera would
never be the same after Wagner and for many
composers his legacy proved a heavy burden. On
the other hand,
Richard
Strauss
accepted Wagnerian ideas but took them in wholly
new directions. He first won fame with the
scandalous
Salome
and the dark tragedy
Elektra,
in which tonality was pushed to the limits. Then
Strauss changed tack in his greatest success,
Der
Rosenkavalier,
where
Mozart
and
Viennese
waltzes
became as important an influence as Wagner.
Strauss continued to produce a highly varied
body of operatic works, often with libretti by
the poet
Hugo von
Hofmannsthal,
right up until
Capriccio
in 1942. Other composers who made individual
contributions to German opera in the early 20th
century include
Zemlinsky,
Hindemith,
Kurt Weill
and the Italian-born
Ferruccio
Busoni.
The operatic innovations of
Arnold
Schoenberg
and his successors are discussed in the section
on modernism.
French opera
In rivalry with
imported Italian opera productions, a separate
French tradition was founded by the Italian
Jean-Baptiste
Lully
at the court of
King Louis
XIV.
Despite his foreign origin, Lully established an
Academy of
Music
and monopolised French opera from 1672. Starting
with
Cadmus et
Hermione,
Lully and his librettist
Quinault
created
tragédie
en musique,
a form in which dance music and choral writing
were particularly prominent. Lully's operas also
show a concern for expressive
recitative
which matched the contours of the French
language. In the 18th century, Lully's most
important successor was
Jean-Philippe Rameau,
who composed five
tragédies
en musique
as well as numerous works in other genres such
as
opéra-ballet,
all notable for their rich orchestration and
harmonic daring. After Rameau's death, the
German
Gluck
was persuaded to produce six operas for the
Parisian
stage
in the 1770s. They show the influence of Rameau,
but simplified and with greater focus on the
drama. At the same time, by the middle of the
18th century another genre was gaining
popularity in France:
opéra
comique.
This was the equivalent of the German
singspiel,
where arias alternated with spoken dialogue.
Notable examples in this style were produced by
Monsigny,
Philidor
and, above all,
Grétry.
During the
Revolutionary
period, composers such as
Méhul
and
Cherubini,
who were followers of Gluck, brought a new
seriousness to the genre, which had never been
wholly "comic" in any case.
By the 1820s,
Gluckian influence in France had given way to a
taste for Italian
bel canto,
especially after the arrival of
Rossini
in Paris. Rossini's
Guillaume
Tell
helped found the new genre of
Grand Opera,
a form whose most famous exponent was another
foreigner,
Giacomo
Meyerbeer.
Meyerbeer's works, such as
Les
Huguenots
emphasised virtuoso singing and extraordinary
stage effects. Lighter opéra comique also
enjoyed tremendous success in the hands of
Boďeldieu,
Auber,
Hérold
and
Adolphe Adam.
In this climate, the operas of the French-born
composer
Hector
Berlioz
struggled to gain a hearing. Berlioz's epic
masterpiece
Les
Troyens,
the culmination of the Gluckian tradition, was
not given a full performance for almost a
hundred years.
In the second
half of the 19th century,
Jacques
Offenbach
created
operetta
with witty and cynical works such as
Orphée
aux enfers,
as well as the opera
Les
Contes d'Hoffmann;
Charles
Gounod
scored a massive success with
Faust;
and
Bizet
composed
Carmen,
which, once audiences learned to accept its
blend of
Romanticism
and realism, became the most popular of all
opéra comiques.
Massenet,
Saint-Saëns
and
Delibes
all composed works which are still part of the
standard repertory. At the same time, the
influence of
Richard
Wagner
was felt as a challenge to the French tradition.
Many French critics angrily rejected Wagner's
music dramas while many French composers closely
imitated them with variable success. Perhaps the
most interesting response came from
Claude
Debussy.
As in Wagner's works, the orchestra plays a
leading role in Debussy's unique opera
Pelléas
et Mélisande
(1902) and there are no real arias, only
recitative. But the drama is understated,
enigmatic and completely unWagnerian.
Other notable
20th century names include
Ravel,
Dukas,
Roussel
and
Milhaud.
Francis
Poulenc
is one of the very few post-war composers of any
nationality whose operas (which include
Dialogues
des carmélites)
have gained a foothold in the international
repertory.
Olivier
Messiaen's
lengthy sacred drama
Saint
François d'Assise
(1983) has also attracted widespread attention.
English-language opera
In England,
opera's antecedent was the 17th century jig.
This was an afterpiece which came at the end of
a play. It was frequently
libellous
and scandalous and consisted in the main of
dialogue set to music arranged from popular
tunes. In this respect, jigs anticipate the
ballad operas of the 18th century. At the same
time, the French
masque
was gaining a firm hold at the English Court,
with even more lavish splendour and highly
realistic scenery than had been seen before.
Inigo Jones
became the quintessential designer of these
productions, and this style was to dominate the
English stage for three centuries. These masques
contained songs and dances. In
Ben Jonson's
Lovers Made Men (1617), "the whole masque
was sung after the Italian manner, stilo
recitativo".
The approach of
the
English
Commonwealth
closed theatres and halted any developments that
may have led to the establishment of English
opera. However, in 1656, the
dramatist
Sir
William
Davenant
produced The Siege of Rhodes. Since his
theatre was not licensed to produce drama, he
asked several of the leading composers (Lawes,
Cooke, Locke, Coleman and Hudson) to set
sections of it to music. This success was
followed by The Cruelty of the Spaniards in
Peru (1658) and The History of Sir
Francis Drake (1659). These pieces were
encouraged by
Oliver
Cromwell
because they were critical of Spain. With the
English
Restoration,
foreign (especially French) musicians were
welcomed back. In 1673,
Thomas
Shadwell's
Psyche, patterned on the 1671 'comédie-ballet'
of the same name produced by
Moličre
and
Jean-Baptiste
Lully.
William
Davenant
produced The Tempest in the same year,
which was the first musical adaption of a
Shakespeare
play (composed by Locke and Johnson). About
1683,
John Blow
composed
Venus and
Adonis,
often thought of as the first true
English-language opera.
Blow's immediate
successor was the better known
Henry
Purcell.
Despite the success of his masterwork
Dido and
Aeneas
(1689), in which the action is furthered by the
use of Italian-style recitative, much of
Purcell's best work was not involved in the
composing of typical opera, but instead he
usually worked within the constraints of the
semi-opera
format, where isolated scenes and masques are
contained within the structure of a spoken play,
such as
Shakespeare
in Purcell's
The
Fairy-Queen
(1692) and Beaumont and Fletcher in The
Prophetess (1690) and Bonduca (1696).
The main characters of the play tend not to be
involved in the musical scenes, which means that
Purcell was rarely able to develop his
characters through song. Despite these
hindrances, his aim (and that of his
collaborator
John Dryden)
was to establish serious opera in England, but
these hopes ended with Purcell's early death at
the age of 36.
Following
Purcell, the popularity of opera in England
dwindled for several decades. A revived interest
in opera occurred in the 1730s which is largely
attributed to
Thomas Arne,
both for his own compositions and for alerting
Handel to the commercial possibilities of
large-scale works in English. Arne was the first
English composer to experiment with
Italian-style all-sung comic opera, with his
greatest success being
Thomas
and Sally
in 1760. His opera
Artaxerxes
(1762) was the first attempt to set a full-blown
opera seria
in English and was a huge success, holding the
stage until the 1830s. Although Arne imitated
many elements of Italian opera, he was perhaps
the only English composer at that time who was
able to move beyond the Italian influences and
create his own unique and distinctly English
voice. His modernized ballad opera, Love in a
Village (1762), began a vogue for pastiche
opera that lasted well into the 19th century.
Charles
Burney
wrote that Arne introduced "a light, airy,
original, and pleasing melody, wholly different
from that of Purcell or Handel, whom all English
composers had either pillaged or imitated".
Besides Arne,
the other dominating force in English opera at
this time was
George
Frideric Handel,
whose opera serias filled the London
operatic stages for decades, and influenced most
home-grown composers, like
John
Frederick Lampe,
who wrote using Italian models. This situation
continued throughout the 18th and 19th
centuries, including in the work of
Michael
William Balfe,
and the operas of the great Italian composers,
as well as those of Mozart, Beethoven and
Meyerbeer, continued to dominate the musical
stage in England.
The only
exceptions were
ballad
operas,
such as
John Gay's
The
Beggar's Opera
(1728), musical
burlesques,
European
operettas,
and late
Victorian
era
light operas,
notably the
Savoy Operas
of
W. S.
Gilbert
and
Arthur
Sullivan,
all of which types of musical entertainments
frequently spoofed operatic conventions.
Sullivan wrote only one grand opera,
Ivanhoe
(following the efforts of a number of young
English composers beginning about 1876), but he
claimed that even his light operas constituted
part of a school of "English" opera, intended to
supplant the French operettas (usually performed
in bad translations) that had dominated the
London stage from the mid-19th century into the
1870s. London's
Daily
Telegraph
agreed, describing
The
Yeomen of the Guard
as "a genuine English opera, forerunner of many
others, let us hope, and possibly significant of
an advance towards a national lyric stage."
In the 20th
century, English opera began to assert more
independence, with works of
Ralph
Vaughan Williams
and in particular
Benjamin
Britten,
who in a series of fine works that remain in
standard repertory today, revealed an excellent
flair for the dramatic and superb musicality.
Today composers such as
Thomas Adčs
continue to export English opera abroad. More
recently
Sir Harrison
Birtwistle
has emerged as one of Britain's most significant
contemporary composers from his first opera
Punch and
Judy
to his most recent critical success in
The Minotaur.
In the 2000s, the librettist of an early
Birtwistle opera,
Michael
Nyman,
has been focusing on composing operas, including
Facing
Goya,
Man and
Boy: Dada,
and
Love
Counts.
Also in the 20th
century, American composers like
Leonard
Bernstein,
George
Gershwin,
Gian Carlo
Menotti,
Douglas
Moore,
and
Carlisle
Floyd
began to contribute English-language operas
infused with touches of popular musical styles.
They were followed by composers such as
Philip Glass,
Mark Adamo,
John
Corigliano,
Robert Moran,
John
Coolidge Adams,
and
Jake Heggie.
Russian opera
Opera was
brought to Russia in the 1730s by the
Italian
operatic
troupes
and soon it became an important part of
entertainment for the Russian Imperial Court and
aristocracy.
Many foreign composers such as
Baldassare
Galuppi,
Giovanni
Paisiello,
Giuseppe
Sarti,
and
Domenico
Cimarosa
(as well as various others) were invited to
Russia to compose new operas, mostly in the
Italian
language.
Simultaneously some domestic musicians like
Maksym
Berezovsky
and
Dmitry
Bortniansky
were sent abroad to learn to write operas. The
first opera written in Russian was
Tsefal i
Prokris
by the Italian composer
Francesco
Araja
(1755). The development of Russian-language
opera was supported by the Russian composers
Vasily
Pashkevich,
Yevstigney
Fomin
and
Alexey
Verstovsky.
However, the
real birth of
Russian
opera
came with
Mikhail
Glinka
and his two great operas
A Life
for the Tsar,
(1836) and
Ruslan
and Ludmila
(1842). After him in the 19th century in Russia
there were written such operatic masterpieces as
Rusalka
and
The Stone
Guest
by
Alexander
Dargomyzhsky,
Boris
Godunov
and
Khovanshchina
by
Modest
Mussorgsky,
Prince
Igor
by
Alexander
Borodin,
Eugene
Onegin
and
The Queen
of Spades
by
Pyotr
Tchaikovsky,
and
The Snow
Maiden
and
Sadko
by
Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov.
These developments mirrored the growth of
Russian
nationalism
across the artistic spectrum, as part of the
more general
Slavophilism
movement.
In the 20th
century the
traditions
of Russian opera were developed by many
composers including
Sergei
Rachmaninov
in his works
The
Miserly Knight
and
Francesca
da Rimini,
Igor
Stravinsky
in
Le
Rossignol,
Mavra,
Oedipus
rex,
and
The
Rake's Progress,
Sergei
Prokofiev
in
The
Gambler,
The Love
for Three Oranges,
The Fiery
Angel,
Betrothal
in a Monastery,
and
War and
Peace;
as well as
Dmitri
Shostakovich
in
The Nose
and
Lady
Macbeth of the Mtsensk District,
Edison
Denisov
in
L'écume
des jours,
and
Alfred
Schnittke
in
Life with
an Idiot,
and
Historia
von D. Johann Fausten.[14]
Other
national operas
Spain also
produced its own distinctive form of opera,
known as
zarzuela,
which had two separate flowerings: one from the
mid 17th century through the mid 18th century,
and another beginning around 1850. During the
late 18th century up until the mid-19th century,
Italian opera was immensely popular in Spain,
supplanting the native form.
Czech composers
also developed a thriving national opera
movement of their own in the 19th century,
starting with
Bedřich
Smetana
who wrote eight operas including the
internationally popular
The
Bartered Bride.
Antonín
Dvořák,
most famous for
Rusalka,
wrote 13 operas; and
Leoš Janáček
gained international recognition in the 20th
century for his innovative works including
Jenůfa,
The
Cunning Little Vixen,
and
Káťa
Kabanová.
The key figure
of Hungarian national opera in the 19th century
was
Ferenc Erkel,
whose works mostly dealt with historical themes.
Among his most often performed operas are
Hunyadi László and Bánk bán. The most
famous modern Hungarian opera is
Béla Bartók's
Duke
Bluebeard's Castle.
The best-known
composer of
Polish
national opera
was
Stanisław
Moniuszko,
most celebrated for the opera
Straszny
Dwór
(in English The Haunted Manor). In the
20th century, other operas created by Polish
composers included
King
Roger
by
Karol
Szymanowski
and Ubu Rex by
Krzysztof
Penderecki.
Dutch composers
where
Willem
Pijper
who wrote an opera based on the Dutch folktale
of
Halewijn
and his pupil
Henk Badings
made several radio-opera's.
Contemporary
trends
Modernism
Perhaps the most
obvious stylistic manifestation of modernism in
opera is the development of
atonality.
The move away from traditional tonality in opera
had begun with
Wagner,
and in particular the
Tristan
chord.
Composers such as
Richard
Strauss,
Claude
Debussy,
Giacomo
Puccini,
Paul
Hindemith
and
Hans
Pfitzner
pushed Wagnerian harmony further with a more
extreme use of chromaticism and greater use of
dissonance.
Operatic
modernism truly began in the operas of two
Viennese composers,
Arnold
Schoenberg
and his student
Alban Berg,
both composers and advocates of atonality and
its later development (as worked out by
Schoenberg),
dodecaphony.
Schoenberg's early musico-dramatic works,
Erwartung
(1909, premiered in 1924) and
Die
glückliche Hand
display heavy use of chromatic harmony and
dissonance in general. Schoenberg also
occasionally used
Sprechstimme,
which he described as: "The voice rising and
falling relative to the indicated intervals, and
everything being bound together with the time
and rhythm of the music except where a pause is
indicated".
The two operas
of Schoenberg's pupil Alban Berg,
Wozzeck
(1925) and
Lulu
(incomplete at his death in 1935) share many of
the same characteristics as described above,
though Berg combined his highly personal
interpretation of Schoenberg's twelve-tone
technique with melodic passages of a more
traditionally tonal nature (quite Mahlerian in
character) which perhaps partially explains why
his operas have remained in standard repertory,
despite their controversial music and plots.
Schoenberg's theories have influenced (either
directly or indirectly) significant numbers of
opera composers ever since, even if they
themselves did not compose using his techniques.
Composers thus
influenced include the Englishman
Benjamin
Britten,
the German
Hans Werner
Henze,
and the Russian
Dmitri
Shostakovich.
(Philip
Glass
also makes use of atonality, though his style is
generally described as
minimalist,
usually thought of as another 20th century
development.)
However,
operatic modernism's use of atonality also
sparked a backlash in the form of
neoclassicism.
An early leader of this movement was
Ferruccio
Busoni
who in 1913 wrote the libretto for his
neoclassical
number opera
Arlecchino
(first performed in 1917). Also among the
vanguard was the Russian
Igor
Stravinsky.
After composing music for the
Diaghilev-produced
ballets
Petrushka
(1911) and
The Rite
of Spring
(1913), Stravinsky turned to neoclassicism, a
development culminating in his opera-oratorio
Oedipus
Rex
(1927). Well after his Rimsky-Korsakov-inspired
works
The
Nightingale
(1914), and
Mavra
(1922), Stravinsky continued to ignore
serialist
technique
and eventually wrote a full-fledged 18th
century-style
diatonic
number opera
The
Rake's Progress
(1951). His resistance to serialism (which ended
at the death of Schoenberg) proved to be an
inspiration for many other composers.
Other trends
A common trend
throughout the 20th century, in both opera and
general orchestral repertoire, is the use of
smaller orchestras as a cost-cutting measure;
the grand Romantic-era orchestras with huge
string sections, multiple harps, extra horns,
and exotic percussion instruments were no longer
feasible. As government and private patronage of
the arts decreased throughout the 20th century,
new works were often commissioned and performed
with smaller budgets, very often resulting in
chamber-sized works, and short, one-act operas.
Many of
Benjamin
Britten's
operas are scored for as few as 13
instrumentalists;
Mark Adamo's
two-act realization of
Little
Women
is scored for 18 instrumentalists.
Another feature
of 20th century opera is the emergence of
contemporary historical operas.
The Death
of Klinghoffer,
Nixon in
China
and
Doctor
Atomic
by
John Adams,
and
Dead Man
Walking
by
Jake Heggie
exemplify the dramatisation on stage of events
in recent living memory, where characters
portrayed in the opera were alive at the time of
the premiere performance. Earlier models of
opera generally stuck to more distant history,
re-telling contemporary fictional stories
(reworkings of popular plays), or
mythical/legendary stories.
The Metropolitan
Opera reports that the average age of its
patrons is now 60. Many opera companies have
experienced a similar trend, and opera company
websites are replete with attempts to attract a
younger audience. This trend is part of the
larger trend of greying audiences for
classical
music
since the last decades of the 20th century. In
an effort to attract younger audiences, the Met
offers a student discount on ticket purchases.
Major opera companies have been better able to
weather the funding cutbacks, because they can
afford to hire star singers which draw
substantial audiences who want to see if their
favorite singer will be able to hit their high "money
notes"
in the show.
Smaller
companies have a more fragile existence, and
they usually depend on a "patchwork quilt" of
support from state and local governments, local
businesses, and fundraisers. Nevertheless, some
smaller companies have found ways of drawing new
audiences. Opera Carolina offer discounts and
happy hour events to the 21–40 year old
demographic. In addition to radio and television
broadcasts of opera performances, which have had
some success in gaining new audiences,
broadcasts of live performances in HD to movie
theatres have shown the potential to reach new
audiences. Since 2006, the Met has broadcast
live performances to several hundred movie
screens all over the world.
From musicals
back towards opera
Also by the late
1930s, some
musicals
began to be written with a more operatic
structure. These works include complex
polyphonic ensembles and reflect musical
developments of their times.
Porgy and
Bess,
influenced by jazz styles, and
Candide,
with its sweeping, lyrical passages and farcical
parodies of opera, both opened on
Broadway
but became accepted as part of the opera
repertory.
Show Boat,
West Side
Story,
Brigadoon,
Sweeney
Todd,
Evita,
The Light
in the Piazza
and others tell dramatic stories through complex
music and are now sometimes seen in opera
houses. Some musicals, beginning with
Tommy
(1969) and
Jesus
Christ Superstar
(1971) and continuing through
Les
Misérables
(1980),
Rent
(1996) and
Spring
Awakening
(2006), use various operatic conventions, such
as
through
composition,
recitative instead of dialogue, leitmotifs and
dramatic stories told predominantly through
rock, pop or contemporary music.[dubious
–
discuss]
Acoustic
enhancement with speakers
A subtle type of
sound electronic reinforcement called
acoustic
enhancement
is used in some concert halls where operas are
performed. Acoustic enhancement systems help
give a more even sound in the hall and prevent
"dead spots" in the audience seating area by
"...augment[ing] a hall's intrinsic acoustic
characteristics." The systems use "...an array
of microphones connected to a computer [which
is] connected to an array of loudspeakers."
However, as concertgoers have become aware of
the use of these systems, debates have arisen,
because some "...purists maintain that the
natural acoustic sound of [Classical] voices
[or] instruments in a given hall should not be
altered."
Kai Harada's
article "Opera's Dirty Little Secret" states
that opera houses began using electronic
acoustic enhancement systems in the 1990s "...to
compensate for flaws in a venue's acoustical
architecture." Despite the uproar that has
arisen amongst operagoers, Harada points out
that none of the major opera houses using
acoustic enhancement systems "...use
traditional, Broadway-style sound reinforcement,
in which most if not all singers are equipped
with radio microphones mixed to a series of
unsightly loudspeakers scattered throughout the
theatre." Instead, most opera houses use the
sound reinforcement system for acoustic
enhancement, and for subtle boosting of offstage
voices, child singers, onstage dialogue, and
sound effects (e.g., church bells in
Tosca
or thunder effects in Wagnerian operas).
Operatic
voices
Vocal
classifications
Singers and the
roles they play are classified by
voice type,
based on the
tessitura,
agility,
power
and
timbre
of their voices. Male singers can be loosely
classified by
vocal range
as
bass,
bass-baritone,
baritone,
tenor
and
countertenor,
and female singers as
contralto,
mezzo-soprano
and
soprano.
(Men sometimes sing in the "female" vocal
ranges, in which case they are termed
sopranist
or
countertenor.
Of these, only the
countertenor
is commonly encountered in opera, sometimes
singing parts written for
castrati
– men neutered at a young age specifically to
give them a higher singing range.) Singers are
then classified by
voice type
– for instance, a soprano can be described as a
lyric soprano,
coloratura,
soubrette,
spinto,
or dramatic soprano. These terms, although not
fully describing a singing voice, associate the
singer's voice with the roles most suitable to
the singer's vocal characteristics. A particular
singer's voice may change drastically over his
or her lifetime, rarely reaching vocal maturity
until the third decade, and sometimes not until
middle age.
Soprano
The soprano
voice has typically been used as the voice of
choice for the female protagonist of the opera
since the latter half of the eighteenth century.
Earlier, it was common for that part to be sung
by any female voice, or even a
castrato.
The current emphasis on a wide vocal range was
primarily an invention of the
Classical
period.
Before that, the vocal virtuosity, not range,
was the priority, with soprano parts rarely
extending above a high
A
(Handel,
for example, only wrote one role extending to a
high
C),
though the castrato
Farinelli
was alleged to possess a top
D
(his lower range was also extraordinary,
extending to tenor C). The mezzo-soprano, a term
of comparatively recent origin, also has a large
repertoire, ranging from the female lead in
Purcell's Dido and Aeneas to such
heavyweight roles as Brangäne in Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde (these are both roles
sometimes sung by sopranos; there is quite a lot
of movement between these two voice-types). For
the true contralto, the range of parts is more
limited, which has given rise to the insider
joke that contraltos only sing "witches,
bitches, and
britches"
roles. In recent years many of the "trouser
roles" from the Baroque era, originally written
for women, and those originally sung by
castrati, have been reassigned to countertenors.
Tenor
The tenor voice,
from the Classical era onwards, has
traditionally been assigned the role of male
protagonist. Many of the most challenging tenor
roles in the repertory were written during the
bel canto era, such as
Donizetti's
sequence of 9 Cs above middle C during
La fille
du régiment.
With Wagner came an emphasis on vocal heft for
his protagonist roles, with this vocal category
described as Heldentenor; this heroic
voice had its more Italianate counterpart in
such roles as Calaf in Puccini's Turandot.
Basses have a long history in opera, having been
used in opera seria in supporting roles,
and sometimes for comic relief (as well as
providing a contrast to the preponderance of
high voices in this genre). The bass repertoire
is wide and varied, stretching from the comedy
of Leporello in
Don
Giovanni
to the nobility of Wotan in
Wagner's
Ring Cycle.
In between the bass and the tenor is the
baritone, which also varies in weight from say,
Guglielmo in Mozart's Cosě fan tutte to
Posa in Verdi's Don Carlos; the actual
designation "baritone" was not used until the
mid-nineteenth century.
Famous
singers
Early
performances of opera were too infrequent for
singers to make a living exclusively from the
style, but with the birth of commercial opera in
the mid-17th century, professional performers
began to emerge. The role of the male hero was
usually entrusted to a
castrato,
and by the 18th century, when Italian opera was
performed throughout Europe, leading castrati
who possessed extraordinary vocal virtuosity,
such as
Senesino
and
Farinelli,
became international stars. The career of the
first major female star (or
prima donna),
Anna Renzi,
dates to the mid-1600s. In the 18th century, a
number of Italian sopranos gained international
renown and often engaged in fierce rivalry, as
was the case with
Faustina
Bordoni
and
Francesca
Cuzzoni,
who started a fist fight with one another during
a performance of a Handel opera. The French
disliked castrati, preferring their male heroes
to be sung by a
haute-contre
(a high tenor), of which
Joseph
Legros
was a leading example.
Though opera
patronage has decreased in the last century in
favor of other arts and media, such as musicals,
cinema, radio, television and recordings, mass
media has also supported the popularity of
famous singers such as
Luciano
Pavarotti,
Plácido
Domingo,
and
José
Carreras
("The
Three Tenors").
Other famous 20th century performers include
Maria Callas,
Montserrat
Caballé,
Joan
Sutherland,
Nellie Melba,
Rosa
Ponselle,
Beniamino
Gigli,
Jussi
Björling,
Feodor
Chaliapin
and
Enrico
Caruso.
Opera in film
Major opera
houses and production companies have begun
broadcasting their performances to local cinemas
throughout the United States and in many other
countries. The
Metropolitan
Opera,
first opened in 1883, began
high-definition television
transmissions in 2006. Many of its performances
are also shown live in
movie
theaters
around the world. In 2007, Met performances were
shown in over 424 theaters in 350 U.S. cities.
La bohčme
went out to 671 screens worldwide. The Met
remains the only company that transmits all of
its performances live, although in many cases
this is only via radio broadcast.
San
Francisco Opera,
founded in 1923, began prerecorded broadcasts in
March 2008. As of June 2008, approximately 125
theaters in 117 U.S. cities carry the broadcast.
Their distribution company,
Bigger
Picture,
screens the operas with the same
HD digital
cinema projectors
used for major
Hollywood
films. European opera houses and
festivals
such as
La Scala
in
Milan,
the
Salzburg
Festival,
La Fenice
in
Venice
and the
Maggio
Musicale
in
Florence
have also broadcast their productions to 91
theaters in 90 U.S. cities since 2006. The
emergence of the Internet is also seemingly
affecting the way in which audiences consume
opera. In a first for the genre, in 2009 British
Opera house
Glyndebourne
made available online a full digital video
download of Wagner’s
Tristan und
Isolde,
filmed two years previously..
Enjoying
opera
Although many
people may feel that opera is complicated and
difficult to understand, with a little
preparation most operatic performances are both
entertaining and educational. Some operas are
performed in English, but it is certainly common
for popular operas to be in Italian or German.
To enjoy an opera in a foreign language, it is
important to familiarize yourself with the story
beforehand. You can either read up on the plot
ahead of time, or simply allow yourself time
before the performance to read through the plot
summary in the performance program. When
booking tickets, check to see if there are sub
or sur titles, and that the seats you choose
have a clear view of the translations.
It is also
helpful not to select seats that are very close
to the stage. Not only is it often cheaper to
sit higher up or further back, but you can get a
better view of the stage as a whole from being a
little further away. Most operas can take at
least two to three hours, so take advantage of
the intermissions to get a drink and read up on
the next section of the plot. You will soon
find you have some favorite opera companies,
favorite performers, and even favorite operas
that you enjoy seeing over and over again, so
that the plot becomes something of an old
friend! That is when you have reached the level
of the true opera-goer!
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