Mozart's operas, a critical study

by Edward Joseph Dent

Paper Book, 1960

Status

Available

Call number

782.1092 M877d

DDC/MDS

782.1092 M877d

Publication

London, Oxford University Press [1960]

Description

Originally published in 1913 when most of Mozart's operas were still almost completely unknown in Britain and America, Edward J. Dent's classic study is now reissued in honor of the 200th anniversary of the Mozart's death. Thoroughly revised in 1947, and now featuring a new introduction by one of today's most distinguished opera scholars, Winton Dean, this volume offers a whole new generation of readers access to the seminal work on Mozart's opera. Dent was fundamental in reviving interest in the great composer's opera, and his translations of the librettos did much to popularize them with English-speaking audiences. For each of the major operas Dent examines its composition, explores the background of its libretto, provides a synopsis of its plot, analyzes its music, and offers a lively discussion of the work's public reception. In addition, he blends his study of the operas with much biographical detail, shedding light not only on the composer and the opera of his time, but on the whole eighteenth-century world of music in which Mozart thrived. Anyone interested in opera in general and Mozart in particular will find this book indispensable.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member therebelprince
Marvellous. In an age when baroque and classical operas were curiosities (at best), Dent was one of the figures who foresaw their rise. Mozart, naturally, is a cut above any of his revived contemporaries but nevertheless he had to wait for his renaissance. Of course this book has been superseded
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and outweighed by a century's worth of commentary and research, but it's still a thorough and energising read.
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Language

Physical description

276 p.; 20 cm
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