- Macdonald, Hugh. Berlioz. Master Musicians. London: Dent, 1982. 261p.
 ISBN 0-460-03156-2. ML410 .B5 M13.
 A useful brief biography, presenting the results of latest scholarship. Macdon-
 ald is directing the issue of the complete works (#545). Bibliography, index.
See also #172.
Operas in General
- Rushton, Julian. The Musical Language of Berlioz. New York: Cambridge
 U.P., 1983. xi, 303p. ISBN 0-521-24279-7. ML410 .B5 R87.
 A valuable analytic approach to the operas and other works, dealing specifi-
 cally with each technical aspect: pitch, counterpoint, rhythm, melody, form,
 and instrumentation, taking Schenker principles as a ground. Lengthy analyses
 of sections from Lélio, Benvenuto Cellini,and La damnation de Faust.
- Dickinson, A. E. F. “Berlioz’ Stage Works.” MR31 (1970): 136–157.
 A general survey of the operas, including those left incomplete and those only
 planned.
- Gräbner, Eric Hans. “Berlioz and the French Operatic Tradition.” Ph.D. diss.,
 York U. (England), 1967. 250p.
- Langford, Jeffrey Alan. “The Operas of Hector Berlioz: Their Relationship to
 the French Operatic Tradition of the Early Nineteenth Century.” Ph.D. diss.,
 U. of Pennsylvania, 1978. 459p.
Individual Works
Béatrice et Bénédict
New Edition(#545), v.3.
- Rushton, Julian. “Berlioz’s Swan-Song: Towards a Criticism of Béatrice et
 Bénédict.” PRMA109 (1982–1983): 105–118.
 The adaptation from Much Ado about Nothingis discussed; it was “drastic,
 leaving very little of the original play.” Also a light technical survey of the
 work.
Benvenuto Cellini
ASO142 (1991), New Edition(#545), v.1.
- Piatier, François. Hector Berlioz “Benvenuto Cellini”: Ou, le myth de l’artiste.
 Paris: Aubier Montaigne, 1979. 137, [38]p. ISBN 2-700-70160-7. ML410 .B5
 P44.
 Draws parallels between Berlioz and Cellini, then compares various versions
 of the opera. Analysis, along with reception history. Complete libretto, one-
 page bibliography, no index.
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