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The Impossible Art: Adventures in Opera
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About This Book
A user's guide to opera―Matthew Aucoin, "the most promising operatic talent in a generation" ( The New York Times Magazine ), describes the creation of his groundbreaking new work, Eurydice , and shares his reflections on the past, present, and future of opera From its beginning, opera has been an impossible art. Its first practitioners, in seventeenth-century Florence, set themselves the unreachable goal of reproducing the wonders of ancient Greek drama, which no one can be sure was sung in the first place. Opera's greatest artists have striven to fuse multiple art forms―music, drama, poetry, dance―into a unified synesthetic experience. The composer Matthew Aucoin, a rising star of the opera world, posits that it is this impossibility that gives opera its exceptional power and serves as its lifeblood. The virtuosity required of its performers, the bizarre and often spectacular nature of its stage productions, the creation of a whole world whose basic fabric is music―opera assumes its true form when it pursues impossible goals. The Impossible Art is a passionate defense of what is best about opera, a love letter to the form, written in the midst of a global pandemic during which operatic performance was (literally) impossible. Aucoin writes of the rare works―ranging from classics by Mozart and Verdi to contemporary offerings of Thomas Adès and Chaya Czernowin―that capture something essential about human experience. He illuminates the symbiotic relationship between composers and librettists, between opera's greatest figures and those of literature. Aucoin also tells the story of his new opera, Eurydice , from its inception to its production on the Metropolitan Opera's iconic stage. The Impossible Art opens the theater door and invites the reader into this extraordinary world.
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Reviews
"He is equally comfortable among musical and performance touchstones of the late 20th and 21st, from Tom Waits and Animal Collective to RuPaul and Radiohead ..."
"Between the discussions of Monteverdi and Birtwistle, Aucoin looked at the late 17th century Marc-Antoine Charpentier, and the triptych struck me as no less than revelatory, a fresh illumination of a potent ancient story ..."
"Aucoin has a gift for accessible writing that mixes technical detail with descriptions that make the material unintimidating ..."
"Aucoin speaks eloquently from his own experience as composer, conductor, writer, and pianist ..."
"For each composer, librettist, or composition the book discusses, he explains what made them groundbreaking and new and what made them similar to their operatic predecessors ..."
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