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The Operas of Verdi: Volume 3: From Don Carlos to Falstaff



This passage discusses the three volumes of a study of Verdi's operas by Julian Budden. The first volume covers Verdi's early works, the second volume covers Verdi's middle works, and the third volume covers Verdi's late works. The three volumes are classics of the genre because they are comprehensive and readable, and they provide a wealth of information about the operas, the composer, and the ti... more details
Key Features:
  • Comprehensive coverage of Verdi's operas, from early works to late works
  • readable and comprehensive
  • provides a wealth of information about the operas, the composer, and the times


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Features
Author Julian Budden
Format Paperback
ISBN 9780198162636
Publisher Clarendon Press
Manufacturer Clarendon Press
Description
This passage discusses the three volumes of a study of Verdi's operas by Julian Budden. The first volume covers Verdi's early works, the second volume covers Verdi's middle works, and the third volume covers Verdi's late works. The three volumes are classics of the genre because they are comprehensive and readable, and they provide a wealth of information about the operas, the composer, and the times.

Volume Three covers roughly a quarter of a century, a period which saw grand opera on the Parisian model established throughout Italy, the reform of the Conservatories, and the spread of cosmopolitan influences to an extent that convinced many that Italian music was losing its identity. Verdi produced his four last and greatest operas--Don Carlos, Aida, Otello, and Falstaff--in this period, which ended with the advent of "verisimo", in which a new, recognizably Italian idiom was inaugurated.
The three volumes of studies of Verdi's operas by Julian Budden are rightly classics of the genre. This is owing to their scope of information on the genesis, circumstances, variants, and specifics of the operas themselves--certainly the fullest description these works have ever been given--as well as to the wealth of surrounding information about the composer, his life, his friends, and his times. It is a measure of the excellence of Budden's achievement that this cornucopia of information is surveyed in very readable prose--readers get a picture of each work within its context. Budden's knowledge of 19th-century opera--both in Italy and in France--is wide-ranging, and he is able to place Verdi and his works in comparison with those of Donizetti, Pacini, Mercadante, and Meyerbeer. He discusses how the great operatic genius emerged from the background of early-19th-century opera and how Verdi's own early, uneven works blossomed into the glory of his later ones. Budden, thankfully, is not a hagiographer, and he recognizes Verdi's faults as well as his strengths, but few--if any--writers have managed to demonstrate how Verdi both blended in with his musical surroundings and stood out from them. These studies, with all their richness, are a good source of information about a host of lesser composers of the time. Budden includes many musical examples to highlight his writing in this, a work of scholarship of the highest order. --Patrick J. Smith
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