Originally posted by Master Jacques
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Michel Legrand (1932-2019): 6-10/1/25
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
No, it's exactly the opposite. Without the words you don't have Shakespeare, Strindberg or Pinter at all. In opera without the words you still have the music of Verdi, Mozart, Wagner. And you still have the plot. And the staging.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
No, it's exactly the opposite. Without the words you don't have Shakespeare, Strindberg or Pinter at all. In opera without the words you still have the music of Verdi, Mozart, Wagner. And you still have the plot. And the staging.
Without the words you simply do not have the operatic music of Verdi and Mozart. Marriage of Figaro Act 2 finale, sans text? No musical sense to it at all. And Wagner spent many years fashioning his texts before deriving music based on them. There's no plot without words to hang them on. Modern stageings still rely on text and stage directions more than scores, as is quite logical.
In opera, music exists to illuminate and power the words: ('prime le parole...', not Salieri's satirical reversal, offered for fun.) Without words, you're left with an overture, or whatever, plus a few marches and ballets to tap your feet to. Even Wagner's magnificent preludes evoke and explicitly counterpoint the texts to come later. The melodies of Mozart are moulded to verbal phrases (which it is the translator's job to emulate), and can't exist without reference to those words.
It's interesting to read Charles Rosen on Beethoven's Piano Sonatas, where exactly the same process (the operatic "aria" impulse) dictates many of the composer's procedures. Those themes rely on words - even if they're generally unspoken. Though in cases such as "es muss sein!", in the last string quartet, the connection is self-evident.
Something else to consider: there is no form of theatre which hasn't used music, to lesser or greater degree. This includes Shakespeare and Strindberg, many of whose plays are inconceivable without it. The RSC still retains a permanent musical ensemble, which is used in every production, playing new musical scores. You cannot separate music and theatre, even in "straight" plays.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
No, it's exactly the opposite. Without the words you don't have Shakespeare, Strindberg or Pinter at all. In opera without the words you still have the music of Verdi, Mozart, Wagner. And you still have the plot. And the staging.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Post
Without the words you simply do not have the operatic music of Verdi and Mozart. Marriage of Figaro Act 2 finale, sans text? No musical sense to it at all. .
I know quite a few people who love orchestral music but cannot abide singing who get great pleasure from the various 'Wagner without words' orchestral transcriptions...
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI suppose one of my all-time favourite opera composers is Rameau.
I just cannot imagine how it would work in English : it is so dependent on French rhythms and cadences, irreproducible in English
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... plenty of musical sense, as the various wind-band and other almost contemporaneous orchestral transcriptions prove
I know quite a few people who love orchestral music but cannot abide singing who get great pleasure from the various 'Wagner without words' orchestral transcriptions...
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
... plenty of musical sense, as the various wind-band and other almost contemporaneous orchestral transcriptions prove
I know quite a few people who love orchestral music but cannot abide singing who get great pleasure from the various 'Wagner without words' orchestral transcriptions...
I ask you also, what sense does the Act II Finale of The Marriage of Figaro have, shorn of its text?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Someone once wrote that the Ring cycle is essentially one gigantic symphony which can be approached and appreciated as such without its "distracting" plot!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI suppose one of my all-time favourite opera composers is Rameau.
I just cannot imagine how it would work in English : it is so dependent on French rhythms and cadences, irreproducible in English.
Seeing (and hearing) is believing, so I suggest you seek out a recording of it. It might surprise you. And most people these days aren't sufficiently versed in Ancien Regime French to make much of Bernard's (doubtless excellent) original poetry.Last edited by Master Jacques; Today, 17:37.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Again we agree! Wagner's theories regarding the need he saw to re-unite the long lasting fissure between musical and verbal language must have overlooked the fact that mutual inter-penetration of these two sources of human communication would have evolved concurrently. It is probably no coincidence that of all earlier French composers Rameau was his favourite - in Ravel's case it was Couperin. As I understand it Wagner's musical language would become more akin to prose than aligned in rhythm and phrase structure to the poetry his criticism was primarily directed towards, and secondarily earlier German composers such as Schumann whose phrase structurings he saw as stilted by over-reliance on pre-existing poetic conventions.
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