Opera

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Louis Spohr (1784–1859)



  1. Brown, Clive. Louis Spohr: A Critical Biography. New York: Cambridge U.P.,

  2. xi, 364p. ISBN 0-521-23990-7. ML410 .S7 B8.
    Life and works, with substantial attention to the operas: plots, genesis, musical
    examples, and technical observations. Backnotes, bibliography of primary and
    secondary materials, expansive index.


Gasparo Spontini (1774–1851)


The first name is also seen as Gaspare. Three operas are in ERO: La vestale,v.42; Fer-
nand Cortez,v.43; and Olympie,v.44.



  1. Ghislanzoni, Alberto. Gasparo Spontini: Studio storico-critico. Rome: Edi-
    zione dell’Ateneo, 1951. 281p. ML410 .S76 G45.
    A footnoted biography, with about 50 photographs. Program notes and some
    technical comments on the operas. No bibliography; name index.

  2. Fragapane, Paolo. Spontini. 2nd. ed. Bologna: Sansoni, 1983. 466p. ML410
    .S76 F7.
    First edition, 1954. A useful well-documented biography, with a bibliographic
    essay that describes the earlier Spontini literature (most of it very early). Pro-
    gram notes on the operas. Worklist, giving publishers or library locations and
    instrumentations. Bibliography, name index.

  3. Libby, Dennis Albert. “Gasparo Spontini and His French and German
    Operas.” Ph.D. diss., Princeton U., 1969. 2v.


Agostino Steffani (1654–1728)


La lotta d’Hercole con Archelaois in HS,v.9.



  1. Baxter, W. H. “Agostino Steffani: A Study of the Man and His Work.” Ph.D.
    diss., Eastman School of Music, U. of Rochester, 1957. 472p.

  2. Croll, G. “Agostino Steffani (1654–1728): Studien zur Biographie, Bibliogra-
    phie der Opern und Turnierspiele.” Ph.D. diss., U. of Münster, 1960.

  3. Keppler, Philip. “Agostino Steffani’s Hannover Operas and a Rediscovered
    Catalogue.” In Studies in Music History: Essays for Oliver Strunk,ed. Harold
    Powers, 341–355 (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton U.P., 1968).
    Discusses stage works presented in Hanover, 1679–1697, the nine operas of
    that period attributed to Steffani (six are said to be definitely genuine), and a
    manuscript catalogue of the operas located by the author in the Hannover
    Landesbibliothek “in a mislabelled cardboard box.”

  4. Marles, Candace. “Opera as instrumentum regni: Agostino Steffani’s Enrico
    Leone.” OQ11-1 (1984–1995): 43–78.
    The opera (1689) was “profoundly affected” by the political circumstances of its
    production: that context is the subject here. Enrico Leonewas the first of Stef-
    fani’s six operas for Hanover, and Duke Ernst August influenced it strongly. He


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