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Read complete books and articles on: Opera History

Opera - drama set to music.

Characteristics

The libretto may be serious or comic, although neither form necessarily excludes elements of the other. Opera differs from operetta in its musical complexity and usually in its subject matter. It differs also from oratorio, which is customarily based on a religious subject and is performed without scenery, costumes, or stage action. Although both


16 of the Best Books and Articles on: Opera History

as selected by Questia librarians
  1. 1.


    The Birth of Opera » Read Now

    by F. W. Sternfeld. 266 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    Written by a leading musicologist, The Birth of Opera looks at the predecessors and early examples of opera from Poliziano's Orfeo (c. 1480) to Monteverdi's Arianna (1608). It pays considerable attention to the role played by such poets as Poliziano, Tasso, Guarini, Rinuccini, and Chiabrera and the...
  2. 2.


    Opera: A Research and Information Guide » Read Now

    by Guy A. Marco. 632 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    This is a guide to the research writings on all aspects of opera. It contains the core literature on the operas of 320 individual composers and details of operatic life in 43 countries.
  3. 3.


    Early Opera in America » Read Now

    by O. G. Sonneck. 234 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    ...where, for the first time in the history of opera in America, the employment of...presented, but beyond this the history of opera in Philadelphia possibly...
  4. 4.


    Opera Odyssey: Toward a History of Opera in Nineteenth-Century America » Read Now

    by June C. Ottenberg. 203 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    Ottenberg synthesizes material from a variety of sources--annals, memoirs, and scholarly sources--and, with them, weaves a coherent narrative of what was performed where, by whom, and what developments took place. Works, companies, and individual singers are discussed to reveal the 19th-century...
  5. 5.


    French Opera, Its Development to the Revolution » Read Now

    by Norman R. Demuth. 337 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    ...should find French Opera bound up with the social history of France. The...dramatic works in the history of the theatre and of opera. It is a landmark...but in no sense an...
  6. 6.


    French Opera at the Fin de Siecle: Wagnerism, Nationalism, and Style » Read Now

    by Steven Huebner. 526 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    This is the first book-length study of the rich operatic repertory written and performed in France during the last two decades of the nineteenth century. Steven Huebner gives an accessible and colorful account of such operatic favorites as Manon and Werther by Massenet, Louise by Charpentier, and...
  7. 7.


    Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera from Rossini to Puccini » Read Now

    by Daniele Pistone, E. Thomas Glasow. 259 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    ...original, is above all a romantic hero whose all-consuming passion drives him to suicide. Thus ends the singular history of the Italian opera libretto, long faithful to...
  8. 8.


    Emblems of Eloquence: Opera and Women's Voices in Seventeenth-Century Venice » Read Now

    by Wendy Heller. 386 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    "This remarkably original book makes a substantial contribution to the history of Venetian opera. Working from the now well-established point of view that opera was a preeminent social and political phenomenon in seventeenth-century Venice, Heller has expanded the sociopolitical arena to include...
  9. 9.


    Opera and the Culture of Fascism » Read Now

    by Jeremy Tambling. 280 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    Tambling draws on the insights of Adorno, Benjamin, Theweleit, Bataille, Kristeva, and others to read nineteenth- and early twentieth-century opera as part of a culture which produced fascism as a crisis-state, and threatened to extinguish the genre as an influential and contemporary form of high...
  10. 10.


    The Culture of Opera Buffa in Mozart's Vienna: A Poetics of Entertainment » Read Now

    by Mary Hunter. 331 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    Mozart's comic operas are among the masterworks of Western civilization, and yet the musical environment in which Mozart and his librettist Lorenzo da Ponte wrote these now-popular operas has received little critical attention. In this richly detailed book, Mary Hunter offers a sweeping, synthetic...
  11. 11.


    Opera and Drama in Eighteenth-Century London: The King's Theatre, Garrick and the Business of Performance » Read Now

    by Ian Woodfield. 339 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    This book explores the cultural and commercial life of Italian opera in late eighteenth-century London. Through primary sources, many analyzed for the first time, Ian Woodfield examines such issues as finances, recruitment policy, handling of singers and composers, links with Paris and Italy, and...
  12. 12.


    English Opera in Late Eighteenth-Century London: Stephen Storace at Drury Lane » Read Now

    by Jane Girdham. 276 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    Stephen Storace (1762-96) was a prominent opera composer in London. His works exemplify the best in English opera, with music closely integrated with the drama, and including attractive tunes the audience could sing and play at home. This book provides unique insights into the musical world of the...
  13. 13.


    Saturday Afternoons at the Old Met: The Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts, 1931-1950 » Read Now

    by Paul Jackson. 569 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    For over sixty years the weekly broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera in New York has been an important part of American cultural life. The broadcasts, whose continuity was ensured when Texaco assumed sponsorship in 1940, have played a significant role in introducing an audience of millions to the...
  14. 14.


    Sign-Off for the Old Met: The Metropolitan Opera Broadcasts, 1950-1966 » Read Now

    by Paul Jackson. 644 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    For more than sixty-five years, the weekly Saturday afternoon broadcasts from the Metropolitan Opera have brought performances from one of the world's great opera companies to millions of listeners. Covering the period from the beginning of the Rudolf Bing era to the destruction of the old Met in...
  15. 15.


    Opera in the Flesh: Sexuality in Operatic Performances » Read Now

    by Sam Abel. 235 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    With Opera in the Flesh, Sam Abel looks at the sexual appeal of opera and the obsessive hold it has on its devotees, and examines the sensual qualities of opera, such as desire, seduction and excess.
  16. 16.


    Mimomania: Music and Gesture in Nineteenth-Century Opera » Read Now

    by Mary Ann Smart. 247 pgs.

    Collections: Entire Library
    "Mimomania is a thoughtful meditation on the persistence and transformation of the musical mimicry of bodily gesture in nineteenth-century opera. Incorporating and reacting to feminist critique, film studies, and recent, new-wave opera studies, Smart shows that this ostensibly straightforward...

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Search in:
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  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.
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