Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;

<p>Of course, many scholars working on opera and music theatre well understand the nature and origins of an opera libretto - or do they? The seductive lure of the printed page is strong, particularly when there is a score to ‘match’, or when there is no thematic catalogue to provide even a bas...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Burden, M
Format: Journal article
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: 2011
Schlagworte:
_version_ 1826279092146667520
author Burden, M
author_facet Burden, M
author_sort Burden, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>Of course, many scholars working on opera and music theatre well understand the nature and origins of an opera libretto - or do they? The seductive lure of the printed page is strong, particularly when there is a score to ‘match’, or when there is no thematic catalogue to provide even a basic chart to navigate around the treacherous waters of the output of even some major 18th-century composers. A libretto is, after all, not ‘music’ - ‘that’s all very well, but why aren’t you talking about the music?’ - so why worry? Just hurry on to the matching score to identify the ‘composer’s intentions’, and all will be well.</p><p>But will it? What does the printed page represent? The 18th-century London opera libretto was shaped and then manipulated to suit each revival, with the aria a moveable unit at the centre of this activity. So prevalent was this, that it has been argued that the resultant operas (pasticcios) remain ‘bugbears to an objective assessment of the nature and quality of Italian opera in eighteenth-century London’. But in one sense, the pasticcio - and the attendant issues of its method, interpretation, and performance - is representative of ‘the nature and quality’ of 18th-century London Italian opera, a fluid, vital, commercially driven, genre. This paper will not only revisit these issues, but will explore the notion that this method of opera compilation was only possible because of the popularity of one poet, Metastasio.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:53:39Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:737a3561-c20a-4b8d-9a74-43ad62301eb6
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:53:39Z
publishDate 2011
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:737a3561-c20a-4b8d-9a74-43ad62301eb62022-03-26T19:56:37ZFluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:737a3561-c20a-4b8d-9a74-43ad62301eb6Music18th Century musicOperaPerformanceEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2011Burden, M<p>Of course, many scholars working on opera and music theatre well understand the nature and origins of an opera libretto - or do they? The seductive lure of the printed page is strong, particularly when there is a score to ‘match’, or when there is no thematic catalogue to provide even a basic chart to navigate around the treacherous waters of the output of even some major 18th-century composers. A libretto is, after all, not ‘music’ - ‘that’s all very well, but why aren’t you talking about the music?’ - so why worry? Just hurry on to the matching score to identify the ‘composer’s intentions’, and all will be well.</p><p>But will it? What does the printed page represent? The 18th-century London opera libretto was shaped and then manipulated to suit each revival, with the aria a moveable unit at the centre of this activity. So prevalent was this, that it has been argued that the resultant operas (pasticcios) remain ‘bugbears to an objective assessment of the nature and quality of Italian opera in eighteenth-century London’. But in one sense, the pasticcio - and the attendant issues of its method, interpretation, and performance - is representative of ‘the nature and quality’ of 18th-century London Italian opera, a fluid, vital, commercially driven, genre. This paper will not only revisit these issues, but will explore the notion that this method of opera compilation was only possible because of the popularity of one poet, Metastasio.</p>
spellingShingle Music
18th Century music
Opera
Performance
Burden, M
Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title_full Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title_fullStr Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title_full_unstemmed Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title_short Fluid texts, moving arias, shifting sands;
title_sort fluid texts moving arias shifting sands
topic Music
18th Century music
Opera
Performance
work_keys_str_mv AT burdenm fluidtextsmovingariasshiftingsands