
California Univeristy Press - 001-100219
The Keys to French Opera in the Nineteenth Century
Author: Hervé Lacombe
Publisher: University of California Press
The Keys to French Opera in the Nineteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
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The Keys to French Opera in the Nineteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States
The Keys to French Opera in the Nineteenth Century
Juilliard Store
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States
Lacombe chooses Bizet's Pearl Fishers (1863) as the exemplar of French opera that combines tradition and innovation. He uses Pearl Fishers as a paradigmatic point of reference for exploring questions of genesis, style, and aesthetic in other nineteenth-century French operatic works. French opera was a social art, he writes, and looping between past and future, between tradition and innovation, it achieved the seemingly impossible union of two antithetical aspects of Romanticism: the taste for theatricality and the desire for intimacy.
The voices of contemporary witnesses are heard throughout Lacombe's book. He makes abundant use of the writings of such musician-critics as Berlioz, Reyer, and Saint-Saëns and also draws on the works of many French writers, including Stendhal, Balzac, Baudelaire, and Zola. Illustrations showing costume sketches, scenery, posters, paintings, photographs, and magazine articles are attractive complements to discussions of particular operas. Together with Edward Schneider's accessible translation, the illustrations make this well-rounded and original study a trove of information for both music scholars and French historians.
