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Opera Books

A
BOOK OF OPERAS
THEIR
HISTORIES, THEIR PLOTS
AND THEIR MUSIC
BY
HENRY EDWARD
KREHBIEL
MUSICAL
EDITOR OF THE “NEW YORK TRIBUNE”; AUTHOR
OF “CHAPTERS OF OPERA,” “STUDIES IN THE
WAGNERIAN DRAMA,” “HOW TO LISTEN
TO MUSIC,” ETC., ETC. COPYRIGHT, 1909,
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and
electrotyped. Published December, 1909. Reprinted January, 1910.
Norwood Press
J. S. Cushing Co. — Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
New York
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1910
All rights
reserved
To
LUGIEN WULSIN
AN OLD FRIEND
“Old
friends are best.” — SELDEN.
“I
love everything that’s old, — old friends, old times, old manners,
old books, old Wine.” — GOLDSMITH.
“Old
wood to burn ! Old wine to drink! Old friends to trust!
Old authors to read !“ — MELCHIOR.

CONTENTS AND
INDEX
CHAPTER I
“IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA”
First
performance of Italian opera in the United States, — Production of
Rossini’s opera in Rome, London, Paris, and New York, —Thomas Phullipps
and his English version, — Miss Leesugg and Mrs. Holman, —Emanuel Garcia
and his troupe, —Malibran, — Early operas in America, — Colman’s
“Spanish Barber,” — Other Figaro operas, — How Rossini came to Write “Il
Barbiere,” —The story of a fiasco, — Garcia and his Spanish song, —
“Segui, o caro,” — Giorgi-Righetti, — The plot of the opera, — The
overture, — “Ecco ridente in cielo,” — “Una voce poco fa,” — Rossini and
Patti, — The lesson scene and what singers have done with it, —Grisi,
Alboni, Catalani, Bosio, Gassier, Patti, Sembrich, Melba, and Viardot, —
An echo of Haydn.
CHAPTER II
“LE NOZZE DI FIGARO”
Beaumarchais
and his Figaro comedies, —” Le Nozze” a sequel to “Il Barbiere,” —
Mozart and Rossini, — Their operas compared, — Opposition to
Beaumarchais’s “Marriage de Figaro,” — Moral grossness of Mozart’s
opera, — A relic of feudalism, — Humor of the horns, — A merry
overture, — The story of the opera, — Cherubino, — “Non so più
cosa son,” — Benucci and the air “Non piuu andrai,” — “Voi che sapete,”
— A marvellous finale, — The song to the zephyr, — A Spanish fandango, —
“Deh vieni non tardar.”
CHAPTER III
“DIE ZAUBERFLÖTE”
The
oldest German opera current in America, —Beethoven’s appreciation of
Mozart’s opera, — Its Teutonism, — Otto Jahn’s estimate, — Papageno,
the German Punch, —Emanuel Schikaneder, — Wieland and the original
of the story of the opera, —How “Die Zanberflöte” came to be Written,
—The story of “Lulu,” — Mozart and freemasonry, —The overture to the
opera, — The fugue theme and a theme from a sonata by Clementi, —The
opera’s play, —“O Isis und Osiris,” — “Hellish rage” and
fiorituri, — The song of the Two Men In Armor, —
Goethe and the libretto of “Die Zauberflöte,” — How the opera should be
viewed.
CHAPTER IV
“DON GIOVANNI”
The
oldest Italian operas in the American repertory, — Mozart as an
influence, —What great composers have said about “Don Giovanni,” —
Beethoven, — Rossini, — Gounod, — Wagner, — History of the opera, — Da
Ponte’s pilferings, — Bertati and Gazzaniga’s “Convitato di Pietra,” —
How the overture to “Don Giovanni “was Written, —First performances of
the opera in Prague, Vienna, London, and New York, —Garcia and Da Ponte,
— Malibran, —English versions of the opera, — The Spanish tale of Don
Juan Tenorio, —Dramatic versions, — The tragical note in the overture, —
The plot of the opera, — Gounod on the beautiful in Mozart’s music, —
Leporello’s catalogue, — “Batti, batti o bel Masetto,” — The three
dances in the first finale, —The last scene, — Mozart quotes from his
contemporaries, — The original close of the opera.
CHAPTER V
“FIDELIO”
An opera
based on conjugal love, — “Fidelio,” “Orfeo,”and “Alceste,” — Beethoven
a Sincere moralist, — Technical history of “Fidelio,” — The subject
treated by Paër and Gaveaux, — Beethoven’s commission, — The first
performance a failure, —A revision by the composer’s friends, — The
second trial, — Beethoven Withdraws his opera, — A second revision, —
The revival of 1814, — Success at last, — First performances in London
and New York, — The opera enriched by a ballet, — Plot of “Fidelio,” —
The first duet, — The canon quartet, — A dramatic trio, — Milder-Hauptmann
and the great scena, — Florestan’s air, — The trumpet
call, — The opera’s four overtures, — Their history.
CHAPTER VI
“FAUST”
The
love story in Gounod’s opera, — Ancient bondsmen of the devil, —
Zoroaster, Democritus, Empedocles, Apollonius, Virgil, Albertus Magnus,
Merlin, Paracelsus, Theophilus of Syracuse, —The myth-making capacity, —
Bismarek and the needle-gun, — Printing, a black art, —Johann Fust of
Mayence, —The veritable Faust, — Testimony of Luther and Melanchthon,
—The literary history of Dr. Faustus, — Goethe and his predecessors, —
Faust’s covenant with Mephistopheles, — Dr. Faustus and matrimony, — The
Polish Faust, — The devil refuses to marry Madame Twardowska, — History
of Gounod’s opera, — The first performance, — Popularity of the opera, —
First productions in London and New York, — The story, — Marguerite
and Gretchen, — The jewel song, — The ballet.
CHAPTER VII
“MEFISTOFELE”
Music
in the mediaeval Faust plays, — Early operas on the subject, — Meyerbeer
and Goethe’s poem, — Composers of Faust music, — Beethoven, — Boito’s
reverence for Goethe’s poem, — His work as a poet, — A man of mixed
blood, — “Mefistofele” a fiasco in Milan, — The opera revised, — Boito’s
early ambitions, — Disconnected episodes, —Philosophy of the opera, —Its
scope, — Use of a typical phrase, — The plot, — Humors of the English
translation, — Music of the prologue, — The Book of Job, — Boito’s
metrical schemes, — The poodle and the friar, — A Polish dance in the
Rhine country, — Gluck and Vestris, — The scene on the Brocken, — The
Classical Sabbath, — Helen of Troy, — A union of classic and
romantic art, — First performance of Boito’s opera in America,
(footnote).
CHAPTER VIII
“LA DAMNATION DE FAUST”
Berlioz’s dramatic legend, — “A thing of shreds and patches,” —
Turned into an opera by Raoul Gunsbourg, — The composer’s “Scenes from
Faust,” — History of the composition, — The Rakoczy March, — Concert
performances in New York, — Scheme of the work, — The dance of the
sylphs and the aërial ballet, — Dance of the will-o’-the-wisps, — The
ride to hell.
CHAPTER IX
“LA TRAVIATA”
Familiarity with music and its effects, — An experience of the
author’s, — Prelude to Verdi’s last act, — Expressiveness of some
melodies, — Verdi, the dramatist, —Von Bulow and Mascagni, — How
“Traviata” came to be written, — Piave, the librettist, — Composed
simultaneously with “Il Trovatore,” — Failure of “La Traviata,” — The
causes, — The style of the music, — Dr. Basevi’s view, — Changes in
costuming, — The opera succeeds, — First performance in New York, — A
criticism by W. H. Fry, — Story of the opera, — Dumas’s story and
Charles Dickens, — Controversy as a help to popular success.
CHAPTER X
”AÏDA”
Popular misconceptions concerning the origin of Verdi’s opera, —
The Suez Canal and Cairo Opera-house, — A pageant opera, — Local color,
— The entombment scene, —The commission for the opera, — The plot and
its author, Mariette Bey, — His archaeological discoveries at Memphis, —
Camille du Locle and Antonio Ghislanzoni, — First performance of the
opera, — Unpleasant experiences in Paris, — The plot, — Ancient Memphis,
— Oriental melodies and local color, — An exotic scale, — The antique
trumpets and their march.
CHAPTER XI
“DER FREISCHÜTZ”
The
overture, — The plot, — A Leitmotif before Wagner, — Berlioz and
Agathe’s air, — The song of the Bridesmaids, — Wagner and
his dying stepfather, — The Teutonism of the opera, — Facts from a court
record, — Folklore of the subject, — Holda, Wotan, and the Wild Hint, —
How magical bullets may be obtained, — Wagner’s description of the
Wolf’s Glen, — Romanticism and classicism, — Weber and Theodor Körner, —
German opera at Dresden, — Composition of “Der Freischuutz,” — First
performances in New York, (footnote).
CHAPTER XII
“TANNHÄUSER”
Wagner and Greek ideals, —Methods of Wagnerian study, — The story
of the opera, — Poetical and musical contents of the overture, — The
bacchanale, — The Tannhäuser legend, — The historical Tannhäuser, — The
contest of minstrels in the Wartbnrg, —Mediaeval ballads, — Heroes and
their charmers, — Classical and other parallels, — Caves of Venus, — The
Hörselberg in Thuringia, — Dame Holda, — The tale of Sir Adelbert.
CHAPTER XIII
“TRISTAN UND ISOLDE”
The
old legend of Tristram and Iseult, — Its literary history, — Ancient
elements, — Wagner’s ethical changes, — How the drama came to be
written, — Frau Wesendonck, — Wagner and Dom Pedro of Brazil, — First
performances in Munich and New York, — The prelude, — Wagner’s poetical
exposition, — The song of the Sailor, — A symbol of suffering, —
The Death Phrase, —The Shepherd’s mournful melody, — His merry
tune, — Tristan’s death.
CHAPTER XIV
”PARSIFAL”
The
story, — The oracle, — The musical symbol of Parsifal, —
Herzeleide, — Kundry, — Suffering and lamentation, — The
bells and march, — The eucharistic hymn, — The love-feast formula, —
Faith, — Unveiling of the Grail, — Klingsor’s incantation, — The
Flower Maidens, — The quest of the Holy Grail, — Personages and
elements of the legend, — Ethical idea of Wagner’s drama, — Biblical and
liturgical elements, — Wagner’s aim, —The Knights Templars, —John the
Baptist, Herodias, and the bloody head, — Relics of Christ’s sufferings,
— The Holy Grail at Genoa, — The sacred lances at Nuremberg and Rome, —
Ancient and mediaeval parallels of personages, apparatuses, and scenes,
— Wagner’s philosophy, — Buddhism, — First performances of “Parsifal” in
Bayreuth and New York, (footnote).
CHAPTER XV
“DIE MEISTERSINGER VON NÜRNBERG”
“Ridendo castigat mores,” —Wagner’s adherence to classical ideals
of tragedy and comedy, — The subject of the satire in “Die
Meistersinger,” — Wagenseil’s book on Nuremberg, — Plot of the comedy,
— The Church of St. Catherine in Nuremberg, — A relic of the
mastersingers, — Mastersongs in the Municipal Library, — Wagner’s chorus
of mastersingers, (footnote) — A poem by Sixtus Beckmesser, — The German
drama in Nuremberg, — Hans Sachs’s plays, — His Tannhäuser tragedy, —”
Tristram and Iseult,” — “ The Witteuberg Nightingale” and “Wach’ auf !“
— Wagner’s quotation from an authentic mastersong melody, — Romanticism
and classicism, — The prelude to “Die Meistersinger.”
CHAPTER XVI
“LOHENGRIN”
Wolfram von Eschenbach’s story of Loherangrin, — Other sources of
the Lohengrmn legend, — “ Der juungere Titurel” and “Le Chevalier äu
Cygne,” — The plot of Wagner’s opera, — A mixture of myths, —
Relationship of the Figaro operas, — Contradictions between “Lohengrin”
and “Parsifal,” — The forbidden question, — Wagner’s love of theatrical
effect, — The finale of “Tannhäuser,” — The law of taboo in “Lohengrin,”
—Jupiter and Semele, — Cupid and Psyche, — The saga of Skéaf, — King
Henry, the Fowler.
CHAPTER XVII
“HÄNSEL UND GRETEL”
Wagner’s influence and his successors, — Engelbert Humperdiuck, —
Myths and fairy tales, — Origin of “Hänsel und Gretel,” — First
performances, — An application of Wagnerian principles, — The prelude, —
The Prayer Theme, — The Counter-charm, — Theme of Fulfilment, — Story of
the opera, — A relic of an old Christmas song, — Theme of the Witch, —
The Theme of Promise, — “Ring around a Rosy,” — The “Knusperwalzer.”
LIST OF
ILLUSTRATIONS
Mozart (after a painting owned by
the author)
Gioacchino Antonio Rossini
Manuel del Popolo Vicente Garcia
Lorenzo da Ponte
Mozart at the Age of Fourteen
House in which “Die Zauberflöte” was Composed
Madame Malibran
The Original Cast of “Don Giovanni” in Vienna
Ludwig van Beethoven
The Prison Yard in “Fidelio”
Fac-simile of Beethoven’s Handwriting
Charles François Gounod
Dr. Faustus, after a painting by
Rembrandt
Mme. Miolan-Carvalho
Arrigo Boito
Christine Nilsson as Marguerite
Hector Berlioz
Maurice Renaud
Giuseppe Verdi
The Double Sqene in “Aïda”
Italo Campanini as Radames
Carl Maria von Weber, Conducting
Fac-simile of Weber’s Handwriting
The Wolf’s Glen Scene in “Der
Freischuutz”
Fac-simile of Wagner’s Autograph of
a Page of the Bacchanale in “Tannhäuser”
The Wartburg
The Contest of Minstrels in the Wartburg,
from an old Ms.
Tannhäuser at
the Bier of Elizabeth,
from a painting by von Kaulbach
Three Famous Tristans
Three Famous Isoldes
The Temple of the Holy Grail “in
Parsifal”
The Magical Garden in :Parsifal”
The Church of St. Catherine in
Nuremberg
Hans Sachs
The Market-place in Nuremberg
An Old Mastersong
Richard Wagner
Engelbert Humperdinck.
The “Knusperwalzer”

Last updated
October 22, 2006 |