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A Mad Love

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Member Reviews

This useful, brief guide to Western opera by a longtime critic is a welcome curtain raiser for newcomers who have never experienced opera. It is also a handy refresher course for those who have attended operas, seen or heard them on radio or television, but who still want to dig a bit deeper.

Perhaps the most useful thing Schweitzer has done is to create a Spotify playlist so readers can listen to the overtures and arias she writes about as they read about them. In addition, her sprightly final chapters about current trends in production, venues, and the very latest works premiered in the 21st century brings the subject as up to date as can be.

Schweitzer begins by defending opera against the naysayers who insist that the art form is past its prime, with the repertoire a mummified collection of dead material for old folks.

“It’s a golden age for opera, and whatever the indisputable glories of the past, there are many fantastic artists who are both superb singers and much better actors than their predecessors. . . . it’s an exciting time . . . also because of the sheer diversity of repertory being presented,” she writes.

The author makes an excellent case for the centrality of opera in the current performing arts landscape. Nothing, she says, replaces the thrill of hearing unamplified voices in a grand hall.

She begins her survey starting with Monteverdi as the first great opera composer, whose work emerged out of hundreds of years of Western European tradition from troubadours to plainchant to Renaissance plays to liturgical dramas.

In her discussion of this 17th century master, she works in definitions of the aria (Monteverdi was the first to insert a solo), comparing it to a soaring Shakespearean soliloquy. She also is frank about the appeal of the castrato, a young male singer castrated so his high pure voice would not break. Fans in Italy, she says, would shout “Long live the knife!” after performances of their favorites; castrati were “real showbiz divos.” But who knew that the last castrato performed in 1913?

Monteverdi, Schweitzer writes, “used music to add depth and poignancy” to a dramatic story “in a way that his contemporaries had failed to do. He also broke new ground” with dissonant harmonies. Nevertheless, his works fell into obscurity until they were brought back in the late 19th century.

From Monteverdi, Schweitzer introduces Lully, Purcell, Handel, and finally Mozart. Then it is on to the long flowing melodic lines of bel canto, or beautiful song, in the early 19th century, starting with Bellini and “Norma.”

Numerous operas that are now part of the standard repertory, including this one, were not successful at their premieres. This allows the author to insert a nice tidbit about the plaques of booing patrons, especially at La Scala in Milan to this day.

Rossini and Donizetti get their due, with sidebars on the evolving roles of tenors and the greatness of past artists including Pavarotti and Callas. Happily, Wagner is covered thoroughly but not given an outsized portion of attention, although the author’s offers a good description of his innovations, including the leitmotif and “the Tristan chord.”

Verdi and Puccini, Bizet and Tchaikovsky and Janecek—the progress of Italian and French opera as well as nationalist streams like Russian and Czech—follow. Detours into opera conductors, feminist objections to opera heroines as victims, verismo, and the question of casting non-white roles enliven the journey.

Perhaps the smartest choice Schweitzer makes is to devote nearly a third of her text to 20th and 21st century operatic contributions, since so much of the “modern” and contemporary efforts are vital yet often under-appreciated by the old-school opera crowd.

Of course, nothing could be more shocking than Strauss’s “Salome,” in which the heroine dances while stripping off her veils and kisses the beheaded Jochanaan. All this in 1905! By comparison, almost every scene in every opera that came after that premiere seems tame, but the music became more dissonant and louder, with Strauss himself writing for huge orchestras.

Berg, Gershwin, Weill and Britten advanced opera into the last century. Philip Glass’s “Einstein on the Beach” is awarded pride of place as the “first important opera of the modern era, but Schweitzer is terrific in stirring John Adams, Thomas Ades, Missy Mazzoli, Jake Heggie, and other living composers into the mix.

She devotes her final chapter to the new European directors of Regietheater, described as “radical and sometimes outlandish reinterpretations” of standard repertory works, “sometimes less politely called Eurotrash,” citing Luc Bondy’s widely hated “Tosca” at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. Finally she notes the end of “park and bark” immobile singers and the rise of convincing acting, thanks in part to closeups rendered by video transmissions.

Schweitzer may have slighted some works—there is no discussion of Puccini’s “Turandot,” no mention of the two “Manons” and only a passing reference to “Fidelio.” Nevertheless, this is a valuable and blessedly concise addition to the literature.

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A good, thorough, comprehensive history of opera over the past several hundred years. Good for researchers, musicians, students, or anyone who enjoys classical music and history.

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«Dolci baci, o languide carezze»

I’ve never read a book about opera. Until now. And this nonfiction work astonished me. It is well written, easy to read and enjoy, full of informations and examples.

I didn’t know anything about opera before reading this book. I knew the story of Tosca just because I loved a musical about it, nothing more. I was fascinated by the music history and by the opera theatre, so I wanted to learn more about these subjects. I decided to request this arc from Netgalley and the publisher and I’m very about how this “personal experiment” turned out: I enjoyed the reading very much.

The books is written in chronological order, it’s full of notes and little explanations, the writing style is easy to follow and shows the passion of the author about the theme.

The history of opera starts in Mantua, an Italian city, with the “Orfeo” written by Monteverdi in honor of a small aristocratic audience that would be familiar with mythological stories and themes. Before seventeen century (1607 precisely), actors were not interested in singing their stories, they were accompanied by music and a chorus. Now the opera permitted to combine music and poetry to tell a story. The actors should sing and not only speak their lines. The “Orfeo” isn’t technically the first opera, but was the most famous at the moment.

In the first part of the book the author explains how the theater worked and how the opera began. The writer showes very well how the audience must accepted the strange choices of actors and scenes, magic and drama. The opera is cathartic, which means that people, after or during the show, changes ideas or has to read the reality with new eyes, because of the strong emotions felt in about two hours. In Ancient Greece dramas were cathartic as much as opera plays, and the important view of emotions’ impact were foundation to the theatrical experience and to the real meaning of the theatre itself. Without the audience’s emotions the actors wouldn’t know how their work was well done. With the opera, the emotions were expressed by songs and poetry in music: the sadness and the love were magnified.

The author then explains the differences between singers, women or men, castrati or white voices. There are also some informations about different time periods, really interesting and important to understand the different roles and realities of the actors.

Writing about opera means also writing about the themes and the stories of the different plays: the author does a great job in summarizing big narrations in few lines. So, the reader can enjoy the reading with more knowledge and passion.

A real interesting part is about the surreal aspects of the opera: there is a lot of quotes about this theme.

“A heroine can sing passionately while dying of tuberculosis, or that people can fall in love a millisecond after meeting.”


“In opera, no matter how unlikely a situation or fantastical a character, he or she represents very human frailties, desires and emotions.”

And then this:

”Perhaps the only truly surreal aspect of opera is that an unamplified human voice can fill a large theatre with an intensity that seems to have been conjured by a magician’s wand.”

I cannot agreed more.

After Monteverdi plays, the writer explains the works of great composers, as Mozart and Bizet.
Talking about this authors the writer introduces a lot of interesting facts about their lifestyles, their ideas, their different opinion about music, voice, storytelling impact and themes.

The history of opera is in front of our eyes, with the luxurious music and the amplified voices, the strongest emotions and the different characters.

Bellini, Rossini and Donizetti have a unique chapter, the second, most about the bel canto style. In the nineteenth century‘s chapter (the third) there is also an important part about Puccini and the giants of this period, as Wagner and Verdi. Really interesting the little informations about the “nationalism” of their works.

After this immersion in German and Late Italian operas, the author explains the verismo or realism with Puccini and Strauss, as I said before. Slavic opera showed itself in these pages.

In Chapter five Strauss is more explicated and there were references to Gershwin and Shostakovich works.
The sixth chapter talks about XXI century opera, while the seventh explores the new problems of the opera in the contemporary world.

With passion and accessible words the author explains very well the uncommon world of the opera, amusing the reader and making the read enjoyable with interesting notes and funny stories about librettists and composers. Really good, I cannot recommend this book more. It was a surprise.

«L'ora è fuggita, e muoio disperato!
E muoio disperato!
E non ho amato mai tanto la vita,
tanto la vita!»

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