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Verdi's Theatre: Creating Drama Through Music
Paperback

Verdi’s Theatre: Creating Drama Through Music

$176.99
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Gilles de Van focuses on an often neglected aspect of Verdi’s operas: their effectiveness as theater. De Van argues that two main aesthetic conceptions underlie all of Verdi’s works: that of the melodrama and the musical drama. In the melodrama the composer relies mainly on dramatic intensity and the rhythm linking various stages of the plot, using exemplary characters and situations. But in the musical drama reality begins to blur, the musical forms lose their excessively neat patterns, and doubt and ambiguity undermine characters and situations, reflecting the crisis of character typical of modernity. Indeed, much of the interest and originality of Verdi’s operas lie in his adherence to both these contradictory systems, allowing the composer/dramatist to be simultaneously classical and modern, traditionalist and innovator.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
15 September 1998
Pages
434
ISBN
9780226143705

Gilles de Van focuses on an often neglected aspect of Verdi’s operas: their effectiveness as theater. De Van argues that two main aesthetic conceptions underlie all of Verdi’s works: that of the melodrama and the musical drama. In the melodrama the composer relies mainly on dramatic intensity and the rhythm linking various stages of the plot, using exemplary characters and situations. But in the musical drama reality begins to blur, the musical forms lose their excessively neat patterns, and doubt and ambiguity undermine characters and situations, reflecting the crisis of character typical of modernity. Indeed, much of the interest and originality of Verdi’s operas lie in his adherence to both these contradictory systems, allowing the composer/dramatist to be simultaneously classical and modern, traditionalist and innovator.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
Country
United States
Date
15 September 1998
Pages
434
ISBN
9780226143705