cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2019-08-06 09:31 am

Opera for Beginners (Part 3 of 3)

I talked about Opera for Beginners for my family reunion talk and used much of the advice I was given here, thank you! :)

-I brought speakers, because there isn't much use in giving an opera talk if you can't hear the music! The hilarious thing was that I was not the only one who had audio/audiovisual components to my presentation, but I was the only one who had brought speakers. I had been a little bitter about lugging them all around Montana, but less so when they turned out to be broadly useful :) What was more irritating was that after they worked fine when I tried them out in my office, they didn't work at all for a while when I was trying to give the talk. Finally my cousin's teenager, who was acting as unofficial tech support, suggested rebooting as a last resort, and of course that worked. Sigh.

-A couple of people mentioned talking about where one might go looking for opera. My biggest recommendations to a newbie are the following:
1.The Chandos Opera in English CDs, without which I would still hate opera today. I highly highly recommend all the Mozart ones, particularly the da Ponte operas (Marriage of Figaro, Don Giovanni, Cosi fan tutte), and the bel canto comedies (e.g., Barber of Seville, The Elixir of Love), and dis-recommend their Verdi except Don Carlos (for some reason Verdi tends to come out a bit muddled). Their French opera also seems to be very good, and I absolutely adore their Eugene Onegin (which stars Thomas Hampson and Kiri te Kanawa).

2. Met On Demand, which comes with a free 7-day trial. People who know a lot about opera rag on the Met for not being adventurous in its staging and concept, which, fair, but for a beginner, in my opinion, that's exactly what you want, and you can't do better than the Met for gorgeous staging and costumes, great singers, and great videography, which I didn't even know would affect me until I started watching a bunch of these... and... it does actually make a huge difference when watching video. (Watching live is, of course, different.)

-I showed several clips, one of which was a 3-minute clip of Kaufmann/Hampson/Salminen in the auto-da-fe scene from Don Carlo. (Alagna/Keenlyside/Furlanetto is still the whole version of Don Carlo I would recommend, but for auto-da-fe out of context I thought the former was better, not least because it didn't have a giant weeping Jesus in the background.) I explained beforehand the background about how Posa is Prince Carlo's best friend but also has the relationship where he has sworn fealty to King Philip. (I have uploaded the clip here (google drive video clip, ~3 minutes) -- [profile] mildredofmidgard, I know music/opera is Not Your Thing but this is the moment in Don Carlo I was talking about, check it out) and my big triumph, as far as I am concerned, is that when the clip ended my cousin cried out, "Oh, that's so sad!" MY WORK HERE IS DONE.

-My other great triumph was that E was curious about what I said about Don Giovanni. Being her, she could not care less about Don G himself -- she was perfectly content with a limited understanding that he was the Bad Guy -- but she was particularly interested in what I said about Don G coming to a sticky end, and asked about it the next day. Once I further explained that there was a singing statue and that in many productions Don G disappeared into flames with the statue at the end, both she and A really wanted to watch it, so that afternoon we all snuggled up on the couch and watched "Don Giovanni, a cenar teco" (this one with Rodney Gilfrey) and they still ask for "the statue opera" on occasion. (That's the only part they have watched or are interested in watching, or that I am interested in playing for them, until they're a lot older. Well, okay, "O statua gentilissima," but that's along the same lines.)

-Since you guys said it was fun for people to recognize music in opera, another short clip I showed was from Thais, because, well, I don't know if it's all Koreans or just my particular family, but all our extended relatives LOOOOOVE Meditation from Thais and all of us cousins who play violin (or piano, if that cousin happened to be near one of the cousins who played violin) have had to play that song approximately six million times, every time a third cousin twice removed came to visit. There was much groaning when the melody was revealed :)

-It turns out my aunt (uncle's wife) really likes opera!!!! We are already making plans to go to Salzburg or Italy sometime and watch opera :D (well, pipe dreams right now... I certainly wouldn't go until my kids are older)

(Part 1 was where I asked for help; Part 2 was an outtake of this post about emoting in opera)
selenak: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] selenak 2019-09-10 08:24 am (UTC)(link)

In the Hohenzollerns' case, uh, there were witnesses.


*nods* Yup. Among others, the physical and verbal abuse of the older children is also mentioned in those spy reports that went to the Austrian court. (The Maria Theresia two parter early on has a not very historical case of Prince Eugen & Grumpkow scheming to to get those crazy kids - her and Fritz - together in a marriage alliance, difference of religion be damned, thereby solving the succession troubles, and young teenage MT basically is all "You want me to marry into that insane family with all the abuse? Thanks but no thanks, I'm marrying Franzl!") And of course, the post-Küstrin correspondence between Wilhelmine and Fritz still exists in large parts, and once he's out of immediate danger, you get the occasional "today another case of the Queen telling me I'm the worst" mention.

Still, when Wilhelmine's memoirs were finally published fifty years later, there was a lot of "no way that's true, this is evil anti-Prussian propaganda!", not because of her factual inaccuracies (which, btw, were to be expected - she wrote those memoirs in Bayreuth during her three years enstrangement from Fritz without access to state archives, the way today's memoirists would have, or anything to remind her other than her memories) but because half a century later, no one could imagine a king behaving like FW did. Once the original manuscript was produced, though, those "Forgery! Slander!" voices died down.

Btw, worth noting: by 1810 (publication date), Napoleon ruled most of continental Europe and had thoroughly defeated Prussia. Remembering the Fritz and FW eras of past glory as something superb and morally uplifting was consequently really important not just to the Prussians.
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2019-09-11 04:39 am (UTC)(link)
(Heh, good for you, fictional!MariaTheresa.)

Unrelated historical anecdote this reminded me of: Mary, Queen of Scots' mother, Marie de Guise, was in a similar situation once where people wanted her to be Henry VIII's umpteenth wife, and she's supposed to have said something like, "But my neck is so little!"

ETA: I was trying to remember who said sth like, "If I had two heads, I would give one to the King of England," and googling says it was a princess Christina of Denmark.
Edited 2019-09-11 04:42 (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2019-09-13 09:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Species that don't evolve to have any self-preservation don't last very long. ;)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2019-09-11 04:33 am (UTC)(link)
she wrote those memoirs in Bayreuth during her three years enstrangement from Fritz without access to state archives, the way today's memoirists would have

It occurs to me this would have been an excellent time to pull a Posa! "Fritz, for reasons I totally can't explain right now I need all your letters. Tell you when we're both dead."
selenak: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] selenak 2019-09-11 08:59 am (UTC)(link)
LOL. Shame Fritz was far more paranoid than Carlos and would not have gone for it. :)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Fredersdorf

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2019-09-11 11:18 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, he would NEVER have gone for it. I just think it's hilarious to imagine.