Opera

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
suggested by the situation and the expression.” Music in support of the text, a
return to Camerata principles. Quotations from Strunk,932–934.

See also Algarotti (#2455).



  1. Wagner, Richard. Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft.Leipzig, 1850.
    Wagner’s extensive writings on music drama (see #1981ff.) focus on his view
    of music as a factor in the drama, “the highest collective art work.” But Wag-
    ner did not consider music as a handmaiden to the text. He saw music reaching
    its greatest potential in cooperation with the other arts. “The united sister arts
    will show themselves and bring their influence to bear, now collectively, now
    two at a time, now singly, as called for by the need of the dramatic action, the
    one determinant of aim and measure.” Quotations from Strunk,1,094–1,112.

  2. Conrad, Peter. A Song of Love and Death: The Meaning of Opera. New York:
    Poseidon, 1987. 384p. ISBN 0-671-64353-3. ML1700 .C668.
    The song is that of Orpheus, considered by Conrad to be the presiding myth
    throughout operatic history. Opera exists to express those Orphic love-death
    ideas. The approach is purely textual (no music is discussed): a study of
    libretti. Nothing is proved, and there are many forced associations. One
    reviewer, M. Owen Lee, described Conrad’s method as a “sort of madness”
    through which “everything can be made to mean everything else.”

  3. Conrad, Peter. Romantic Opera and Literary Form.Berkeley: U. of California
    Press, 1977. vii, 185p. ISBN 0-5200-3258-6. ML2110 .C754.
    An examination of Verdi, Wagner, Strauss, and some contemporaries in terms
    of their handling of story and literary sources of their plots. The underlying
    assumption—as in the previous entry—is that literary matters are the basic
    forces in opera. Conrad’s terminology is inconsistent, and his efforts do not
    seem to advance his theories. Bibliography of about 50 items, name index.

  4. Dahlhaus, Carl. “Drammaturgia dell’opera italiana.” In Bianconi (#2428),
    77–162.
    Although focused on Italian practice, this is a significant contribution to oper-
    atic theory. Opera was created in the 17th century along with modern drama
    (Shakespeare and Racine) and should be examined in that context, not in the
    light of ancient Greek drama. The difference between drama and opera is that
    drama is articulated by verbal discourse, opera by scenic events. It is out of
    place to judge the dramatic quality of opera in terms of spoken drama. The
    form of classical tragedy is not relevant to the opera libretto, which has other
    purposes. In the Italian baroque it had to provide a vehicle for arias that dis-
    played certain emotions (while making some sense as a story). In Italian opera
    of all periods, the musical realization is connected to whatever is onstage at the
    moment, apart from the textual narrative. It is anchored in the present, con-
    cerned with expressing affect. In both drama and opera, the text or story can
    be summarized, so it is a property and not the essence of the work (which can
    be experienced only in its own terms). Modern productions are thus wrongly
    conceived when they aim at making the story more realistic.


82 Opera


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