Puccini's Soundscapes

Puccini's Soundscapes
Title Puccini's Soundscapes PDF eBook
Author Arman Schwartz
Publisher
Total Pages 179
Release 2016
Genre
ISBN 9788822281487

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Giacomo Puccini and His World

Giacomo Puccini and His World
Title Giacomo Puccini and His World PDF eBook
Author Arman Schwartz
Publisher Princeton University Press
Total Pages 360
Release 2016-08-09
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0691172862

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Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924) is the world's most frequently performed operatic composer, yet he is only beginning to receive serious scholarly attention. In Giacomo Puccini and His World, an international roster of music specialists, several writing on Puccini for the first time, offers a variety of new critical perspectives on the composer and his works. Containing discussions of all of Puccini’s operas from Manon Lescaut (1893) to Turandot (1926), this volume aims to move beyond clichés of the composer as a Romantic epigone and to resituate him at the heart of early twentieth-century musical modernity. This collection’s essays explore Puccini’s engagement with spoken theater and operetta, and with new technologies like photography and cinema. Other essays consider the philosophical problems raised by "realist" opera, discuss the composer’s place in a variety of cosmopolitan formations, and reevaluate Puccini’s orientalism and his complex interactions with the Italian fascist state. A rich array of primary source material, including previously unpublished letters and documents, provides vital information on Puccini’s interactions with singers, conductors, and stage directors, and on the early reception of the verismo movement. Excerpts from Fausto Torrefranca’s notorious Giacomo Puccini and International Opera, perhaps the most vicious diatribe ever directed against the composer, appear here in English for the first time. The contributors are Micaela Baranello, Leon Botstein, Alessandra Campana, Delia Casadei, Ben Earle, Elaine Fitz Gibbon, Walter Frisch, Michele Girardi, Arthur Groos, Steven Huebner, Ellen Lockhart, Christopher Morris, Arman Schwartz, Emanuele Senici, and Alexandra Wilson.

Puccini in Context

Puccini in Context
Title Puccini in Context PDF eBook
Author Alexandra Wilson
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 517
Release 2023-09-14
Genre Music
ISBN 1108875688

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Exploring the many dimensions of Giacomo Puccini's historical legacy and significance, this book situates the much-loved opera composer within the cultural, social, political, and aesthetic contexts of his time and demonstrates how political concerns shape the way we approach and interpret his works in the present day.

Middlebrow Modernism

Middlebrow Modernism
Title Middlebrow Modernism PDF eBook
Author Christopher Chowrimootoo
Publisher Univ of California Press
Total Pages 244
Release 2018-10-09
Genre Music
ISBN 0520970705

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A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. Situated at the intersections of twentieth-century music history, historiography, and aesthetics, Middlebrow Modernism uses Benjamin Britten’s operas to illustrate the ways in which composers, critics, and audiences mediated the “great divide” between modernism and mass culture. Reviving mid-century discussions of the middlebrow, Christopher Chowrimootoo demonstrates how Britten’s works allowed audiences to have their modernist cake and eat it: to revel in the pleasures of consonance, lyricism, and theatrical spectacle even while enjoying the prestige that came from rejecting them. By focusing on moments when reigning aesthetic oppositions and hierarchies threatened to collapse, this study offers a powerful model for recovering shades of grey in the traditionally black-and-white historiographies of twentieth-century music.

Operatic Geographies

Operatic Geographies
Title Operatic Geographies PDF eBook
Author Suzanne Aspden
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Total Pages 328
Release 2019-04-22
Genre Music
ISBN 022659601X

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Since its origin, opera has been identified with the performance and negotiation of power. Once theaters specifically for opera were established, that connection was expressed in the design and situation of the buildings themselves, as much as through the content of operatic works. Yet the importance of the opera house’s physical situation, and the ways in which opera and the opera house have shaped each other, have seldom been treated as topics worthy of examination. Operatic Geographies invites us to reconsider the opera house’s spatial production. Looking at opera through the lens of cultural geography, this anthology rethinks the opera house’s landscape, not as a static backdrop, but as an expression of territoriality. The essays in this anthology consider moments across the history of the genre, and across a range of geographical contexts—from the urban to the suburban to the rural, and from the “Old” world to the “New.” One of the book’s most novel approaches is to consider interactions between opera and its environments—that is, both in the domain of the traditional opera house and in less visible, more peripheral spaces, from girls’ schools in late seventeenth-century England, to the temporary arrangements of touring operatic troupes in nineteenth-century Calcutta, to rural, open-air theaters in early twentieth-century France. The essays throughout Operatic Geographies powerfully illustrate how opera’s spatial production informs the historical development of its social, cultural, and political functions.

The Oxford Handbook of Timbre

The Oxford Handbook of Timbre
Title The Oxford Handbook of Timbre PDF eBook
Author Emily I. Dolan
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 740
Release 2021
Genre Music
ISBN 0190637226

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"With essays covering an array of topics including ancient Homeric texts, contemporary sound installations, violin mutes, birdsong, and cochlear implants, this volume reveals the richness of what it means to think and talk about timbre and the materiality of the experience of sound"--

Technology and the Diva

Technology and the Diva
Title Technology and the Diva PDF eBook
Author Karen Henson
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 245
Release 2016-09-12
Genre Art
ISBN 0521198062

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Focuses on the operatic soprano as the diva and her relationships with technology from the 1820s to the digital age.