Product details:
ISBN13: | 9781837650781 |
ISBN10: | 18376507811 |
Binding: | Hardback |
No. of pages: | 194 pages |
Size: | 234x156 mm |
Weight: | 1 g |
Language: | English |
Illustrations: | 30 music exx. and 8 b/w illus. |
690 |
Category:
Opera, operetta, musical
Musicology in general and music history
Classical music
Sheet music, hymn books
Music teaching
Opera, operetta, musical (charity campaign)
Musicology in general and music history (charity campaign)
Classical music (charity campaign)
Sheet music, hymn books (charity campaign)
Music teaching (charity campaign)
Italian Opera Singing at the Time of Verismo
The Invention of the Modern Voice
Publisher: Boydell Press
Date of Publication: 24 September 2024
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
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Short description:
Connects discussions of vocality and operatic culture with broader aesthetic and cultural shifts in society.
Long description:
Connects discussions of vocality and operatic culture with broader aesthetic and cultural shifts in society.
In the decades that span the turn of the twentieth century, the Italian tradition of operatic singing became 'modern'. This book identifies and explores the formative elements of this multifaceted 'modernity', and its connections with the emergence of verismo, a realistic trend that affected every aspect of creative and intellectual life in fin-de-si?cle Italy. Thisnovel approach to artistic representation meant that singers had to redefine the operatic voice, exchanging the bel canto ideal of 'pure' vocal quality with an irreversible gendered connotation and an erotically charged expressive force. Pivotal to this shift was the gradual development of a homogeneous vocal colour through the compass, an aesthetic principle that was alien to the voice culture of the previous centuries. Star singers such as Enrico Caruso, Titta Ruffo, Emma Carelli and Eugenia Burzio were instrumental in this radical transition.
The book explores how and why modern singers consciously pursued a new vocal expressivity, illuminating the ways in which the changes they introduced in their vocal techniques yielded novel stylistic gestures, and ultimately shaped operatic culture.Through a comparative analysis of early vocal recordings and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century vocal methods and drawing on archival research in London, Milan, Rome and Buenos Aires, the book connects discussions of vocality and operatic culture with broader aesthetic and cultural shifts in society. Italian Opera Singing at the Time of Verismo, will be of interest to scholars and students of opera history, performance studies and recording history, as well as voice coaches and professional singers.
In the decades that span the turn of the twentieth century, the Italian tradition of operatic singing became 'modern'. This book identifies and explores the formative elements of this multifaceted 'modernity', and its connections with the emergence of verismo, a realistic trend that affected every aspect of creative and intellectual life in fin-de-si?cle Italy. Thisnovel approach to artistic representation meant that singers had to redefine the operatic voice, exchanging the bel canto ideal of 'pure' vocal quality with an irreversible gendered connotation and an erotically charged expressive force. Pivotal to this shift was the gradual development of a homogeneous vocal colour through the compass, an aesthetic principle that was alien to the voice culture of the previous centuries. Star singers such as Enrico Caruso, Titta Ruffo, Emma Carelli and Eugenia Burzio were instrumental in this radical transition.
The book explores how and why modern singers consciously pursued a new vocal expressivity, illuminating the ways in which the changes they introduced in their vocal techniques yielded novel stylistic gestures, and ultimately shaped operatic culture.Through a comparative analysis of early vocal recordings and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century vocal methods and drawing on archival research in London, Milan, Rome and Buenos Aires, the book connects discussions of vocality and operatic culture with broader aesthetic and cultural shifts in society. Italian Opera Singing at the Time of Verismo, will be of interest to scholars and students of opera history, performance studies and recording history, as well as voice coaches and professional singers.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
1 Changing Italian Opera: Verismo, Singers and the Foreigners
Framing Verismo
The Features of Verismo Singing: New Demands on Modern Singers
The French, Changes in Dramaturgy and Librettos
Winds of Change from the North
The Anti-Modern Crusade of Vocal Pedagogues
2 Vocal Registers: Defining Key Terms
The Concept of Vocal Register
Register Division Theories
Survey of Key Historical Vocal Treatises
Aesthetics of Vocal Registration in the Latter Part of the Nineteenth Century
3 The Components of Modern Singing
A Few Essentials of Modern Singing
Bel Canto Encounters Verismo: Nellie Melba versus Emma Carelli
More on the Passaggio: Mattia Battistini versus Titta Ruffo and the Veristizzazione of Bel Canto
The Granitic Diction of the Modern Singer
4 The Pathway to Modern Singing: The Tenor at the Time of Caruso
In Search of Modernity
Caruso's 'Naturalness' and 'Spontaneity': Between Production and Reception
The Top C 'from the Chest': Between the Myth and the Recorded Evidence
Some Preliminary Conclusions on the Natural Singing of Caruso
5 Italian Sopranos and the Disruption of Tradition
The Verismo Sopranos Eugenia Burzio and Emma Carelli
The Chest Voice on Record
The Medium Register: Vocal Modulations and the Spoken Theatre
The Upper Register
Conclusions
Bibliography
Discography
Index
1 Changing Italian Opera: Verismo, Singers and the Foreigners
Framing Verismo
The Features of Verismo Singing: New Demands on Modern Singers
The French, Changes in Dramaturgy and Librettos
Winds of Change from the North
The Anti-Modern Crusade of Vocal Pedagogues
2 Vocal Registers: Defining Key Terms
The Concept of Vocal Register
Register Division Theories
Survey of Key Historical Vocal Treatises
Aesthetics of Vocal Registration in the Latter Part of the Nineteenth Century
3 The Components of Modern Singing
A Few Essentials of Modern Singing
Bel Canto Encounters Verismo: Nellie Melba versus Emma Carelli
More on the Passaggio: Mattia Battistini versus Titta Ruffo and the Veristizzazione of Bel Canto
The Granitic Diction of the Modern Singer
4 The Pathway to Modern Singing: The Tenor at the Time of Caruso
In Search of Modernity
Caruso's 'Naturalness' and 'Spontaneity': Between Production and Reception
The Top C 'from the Chest': Between the Myth and the Recorded Evidence
Some Preliminary Conclusions on the Natural Singing of Caruso
5 Italian Sopranos and the Disruption of Tradition
The Verismo Sopranos Eugenia Burzio and Emma Carelli
The Chest Voice on Record
The Medium Register: Vocal Modulations and the Spoken Theatre
The Upper Register
Conclusions
Bibliography
Discography
Index