Ebook: Monstrous Opera: Rameau and the Tragic Tradition
Author: Charles Dill
- Tags: Opera, Songbooks, Musical Genres, Music, Arts & Photography, Classical, Composers & Musicians, Arts & Literature, Biographies & Memoirs
- Year: 1998
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Language: English
- pdf
In his compositions, Rameau tried to highlight music's potential for dramatic meanings. But his listeners, who understood lyric tragedy to be a poetic rather than musical genre, were generally frustrated by these attempts. In fact, some described Rameau's music as monstrous—using an image of deformity to represent the failure of reason and communication. Dill shows how Rameau answered his critics with rational, theoretical arguments about the role of music in lyric tragedy. At the same time, however, the composer sought to placate his audiences by substantially revising his musical texts in later performances, sometimes abandoning his most creative ideas.
Monstrous Opera illuminates the complexity of Rameau's vision, revealing not only the tensions within the music but also the conflicting desires that drove the man—himself caricatured by his contemporaries as a monster.