Adès: The Tempest, though the music he and his helper(s) wrote for it does, I feel, live down to Oakes's doggerel libretto, so it does not really fit the criteria of the threads' title.
Great music - terrible libretto - what is the best opera with the worst libretto.
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostI suppose The Ice Break deserves a mention. Does anyone remember the eternal line, 'This chick wants ballin'?' and 'Play it cool.' But, on the other hand, perhaps we mock it because we simply don't expect this kind of language in opera.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostHa! Och's moment of truth, where he looks round, sees how he's been had, and makes a hasty exit stage left ("Leopold, wir gehn!") is turned by Strauss into quite a triumphant business. It's one of the great exits in opera. He realises he can't beat this lot, when it comes to intrigue and charlatanism, and retreats to his own element. And unlike the sugary Marschallin, he ain't coming back!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAdès: The Tempest, though the music he and his helper(s) wrote for it does, I feel, live down to Oakes's doggerel libretto, so it does not really fit the criteria of the threads' title.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostIn the face of your roster of evidence, I must agree with you. But unlike Mozart and Beaumarchais in Figaro, who hold on to the idea that there might be a better social order around the corner, Hoffmanstahl is a cynic about the whole business of society.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostSeriously though : Von Hofmannsthal was a conservative not a Marxist , very much a supporter of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Der Rosenkavalier embodies “conservative “ values. But so confident are Strauss and HVH in those values in poking fun at them they subtly undermine them. I think they realise the game is up for the Old Vienna and also for their contemporary Vienna. That’s very much the sense I get from Zweig’s World of Yesteryear. The work, for me , reeks of decaying Freudian neurosis - fear of age , for of loss, even fear of sex. What I’m trying to say is that for all the ebullient confidence of the score it’s a momento mori really.
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Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostI suppose The Ice Break deserves a mention. Does anyone remember the eternal line, 'This chick wants ballin'?' and 'Play it cool.' But, on the other hand, perhaps we mock it because we simply don't expect this kind of language in opera.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostSeriously though : Von Hofmannsthal was a conservative not a Marxist , very much a supporter of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Der Rosenkavalier embodies “conservative “ values. But so confident are Strauss and HVH in those values in poking fun at them they subtly undermine them. I think they realise the game is up for the Old Vienna and also for their contemporary Vienna. That’s very much the sense I get from Zweig’s World of Yesteryear. The work, for me , reeks of decaying Freudian neurosis - fear of age , for of loss, even fear of sex. What I’m trying to say is that for all the ebullient confidence of the score it’s a momento mori really.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI still can't really deal with Ochs' portrayal as a sort-of sympathetic character or the hamfistedly comedic treatment of his comeuppance. The impending collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire is certainly always present, but for me there's too much emphasis on the beautiful chocolate box and not enough on the mouldy chocolates inside. Not that anything else could be expected from the composer of Schlagobers, or for that matter Metamorphosen.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI still can't really deal with Ochs' portrayal as a sort-of sympathetic character or the hamfistedly comedic treatment of his comeuppance. The impending collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire is certainly always present, but for me there's too much emphasis on the beautiful chocolate box and not enough on the mouldy chocolates inside. Not that anything else could be expected from the composer of Schlagobers, or for that matter Metamorphosen.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI can’t make up my mind about Metamorphosen. Is it profoundly moving or a long exercise in self-pity?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostSeriously though : Von Hofmannsthal was a conservative not a Marxist , very much a supporter of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Der Rosenkavalier embodies “conservative “ values. But so confident are Strauss and HVH in those values in poking fun at them they subtly undermine them. I think they realise the game is up for the Old Vienna and also for their contemporary Vienna. That’s very much the sense I get from Zweig’s World of Yesteryear. The work, for me , reeks of decaying Freudian neurosis - fear of age , for of loss, even fear of sex. What I’m trying to say is that for all the ebullient confidence of the score it’s a momento mori really.
Von H and Strauss were both conservatives.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI still can't really deal with Ochs' portrayal as a sort-of sympathetic character or the hamfistedly comedic treatment of his comeuppance. The impending collapse of the Austro-Hungarian empire is certainly always present, but for me there's too much emphasis on the beautiful chocolate box and not enough on the mouldy chocolates inside. Not that anything else could be expected from the composer of Schlagobers, or for that matter Metamorphosen.
I have seen Ochs played as a dangerous sexual predator as well as a buffoon (he is both, of course). The opera is strong enough to withstand different approaches to characterisation, and still work.
However, those wanting a Marxist critique of Vienna under the Habsburgs should look elsewhere; they were never going to get that from Strauss and von H.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAdès: The Tempest, though the music he and his helper(s) wrote for it does, I feel, live down to Oakes's doggerel libretto, so it does not really fit the criteria of the threads' title.
And I'm in love
With Ferdinand!'
(sic? - as quoted from memory).
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