Word and Music Studies Selected Essays on Opera by Ulrich Weisstein WORD AND MUSIC STUDIES 8 Series Editors Walter Bernhart Michael Halliwell Lawrence Kramer Suzanne M. Lodato Steven Paul Scher† Werner Wolf The book series WORD AND MUSIC STUDIES (WMS) is the central organ of the International Association for Word and Music Studies (WMA), an association founded in 1997 to promote transdisciplinary scholarly inquiry devoted to the relations between literature/verbal texts/language and music. WMA aims to provide an international forum for musicologists and literary scholars with an interest in interart/intermedial studies and in crossing cultural as well as disciplinary boundaries. WORD AND MUSIC STUDIES will publish, generally on an annual basis, theme-oriented volumes, documenting and critically assessing the scope, theory, methodology, and the disciplinary and institutional dimensions and prospects of the field on an international scale: conference proceedings, collections of scholarly essays, and, occasionally, monographs on pertinent individual topics as well as research reports and bibliographical and lexicographical work. Word and Music Studies Selected Essays on Opera by Ulrich Weisstein Edited by Walter Bernhart Amsterdam - New York, NY 2006 The paper on which this book is printed meets the requirements of “ISO 9706: 1994, Information and documentation - Paper for documents - Requirements for permanence”. ISBN-10: 90-420-2111-X ISBN-13: 978-90-420-2111-2 ©Editions Rodopi B.V., Amsterdam - New York, NY 2006 Printed in The Netherlands Contents Preface .............................................................................................. vii Selected Essays on Opera by Ulrich Weisstein The Libretto as Literature (1961) ....................................................... 3 Cocteau, Stravinsky, Brecht, and the Birth of Epic Opera (1962) .... 17 Introduction to The Essence of Opera (1964) ................................... 33 Reflections on a Golden Style: W. H. Auden’s Theory of Opera (1970) ........................................... 43 “Per porle in lista”: Da Ponte/Leporello’s Amorous Inventory and its Literary and Operatic Antecedents from Tirso de Molina to Giovanni Bertati (1981) ................................................................ 65 Educating Siegfried (1984) ............................................................... 91 (Pariser) Farce oder wienerische Maskerade? Die französischen Quellen des Rosenkavalier (1987)..................... 105 The Little Word und: Tristan und Isolde as Verbal Construct (1987) ............................................................. 141 Benedetto Marcellos Il Teatro alla moda: Scherz, Satire, Parodie oder tiefere Bedeutung? (1989) ................. 171 Von Ballhorn ins Bockshorn gejagt: Unwillkürliche Parodie und unfreiwillige Komik in Ambroise Thomas’ Mignon (1989) ............................................ 201 “Die letzte Häutung”. Two German Künstleropern of the Twentieth Century: Hans Pfitzner’s Palestrina and Paul Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler (1992) ................................... 229 Between Progress and Regression: The Text of Stravinsky’s Opera The Rake’s Progress in the Light of its Evolution (1992) ................................................ 273 What is Romantic Opera? Toward a Musico-Literary Definition (1994) ................................. 301 Böse Menschen singen keine Arien: Prolegomena zu einer ungeschriebenen Geschichte der Opernzensur (1996) .................... 337 Sources ............................................................................................ 369 Acknowledgments .......................................................................... 371 Register of Persons and Operas Mentioned in the Text ..................................................................... 373 Preface Ulrich Weisstein, well-known as an international authority in the fields of comparative literature and comparative arts, is one of those scholars of worldwide distinction who have paved the way for the now flourishing field of intermedia studies. His most extensive inter- medial concerns have always been with the relations of literature to the visual arts and to music. Already his dissertation was devoted to opera, which is a form that has become his life-time obsession. It is in the operatic field that Professor Weisstein has most significantly con- tributed to the area of Word and Music Studies, which sufficiently explains why his work on opera is now naturally finding its way into the book series of that name. What is here presented is a collection of essays which reflect fifty years of Ulrich Weisstein’s involvement with opera and which re- present thirty-five years of his publishing activity in the field. The necessarily restrictive selection of essays from his impressively large output on opera is primarily governed by the wish to present to an interested scholarly readership texts that are representative of their author’s work and, at the same time, are unlikely to be readily avail- able through other channels. Further selection considerations, con- cerning limits of space and the avoidance of occasional thematic duplications, have led to the sequence of fourteen essays collected in this volume, which are arranged in chronological order and – follow- ing the publisher’s policy – are predominantly written in English. Only four – of a substantial number in that language – are in German, but the volume would have been sadly diminished without them as they address essential and particularly suggestive issues. The title of the first essay here reprinted, “The Libretto as Litera- ture”, has the character of a motto for much of what follows, as it points to a central concern of Weisstein’s work on opera. He intro- duced the serious study of libretti in their own right and, thus, can be seen as an early initiator of librettology as an independent branch of viii Preface literary and intermedial studies. His keenest interest is in the genesis of dramaturgically successful operas, tracing adaptive processes from textual sources to final products and investigating the collaborative efforts of writers and composers in creating effective operas. A further innovative focus is on the social ambience of operas as, for example, reflected in Marcello’s Il Teatro alla moda with its brilliant satire on operatic activities in early-eighteenth-century Italy, or in the surpris- ingly widespread practices of opera censorship, on which the most recent essay included in this selection throws a strong first light. Generally, the essays show a tendency to discuss works which are not necessarily the most popular and most frequently studied ones, which results in a welcome widening of perspective and offers opportunities for unexpected discoveries, such as a number of so-called artist operas, which reflect Ulrich Weisstein’s most personal interests as an indefatigable art-lover. His wide range of experience allows for a bird’s-eye overview of the various types of opera that have emerged over the centuries, an overview that he has given in his seminal earlier volume, The Essence of Opera, and which led to his attempts at defin- ing the specific properties of such forms as the romantic opera or the epic opera, to be found in this selection. It is to be hoped that the essays here collected, written as they are in an accessible, essentially non-technical language, make not only a profitable reading, but a pleasurable one as well. Thanks are due to Professor Weisstein himself for his untiring commitment and enthusiasm in collaborating on letting this book see the light of day, and to Ingrid Hable, who has once again been a most conscientious help in bringing a volume of Word and Music Studies into the printable shape as required by current publishing standards. All essays have been reset, but bibliographical documentation has not been unified and basically follows the principles of the original publications. Yet it has been carefully checked and, where necessary, made consistent and occasionally corrected. The sources of the essays and the acknowledgments of permissions for reprint are found at the end of the volume. Graz, June 2006 Walter Bernhart Selected Essays on Opera by Ulrich Weisstein
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