Tuesday, 13 September 2016

A beginner's guide to opera



Here’s a good tip to begin with. If you have never been to an opera performance before, don’t start with Wagner’s Ring Cycle! At a total stage time of 15 hours, plus intermissions, that represents a major commitment not only of your time but your concentration, not to mention the possession of excellent bladder control. Wagner is not to everyone’s taste and, as Rossini once famously remarked, he has some sublime moments but also some terrible quarters of an hour.

Indeed, the best introduction to opera is probably not to attend a performance at all but to listen to CDs or downloads of great performances. Some of the most sublime music of all time comes from opera, such as the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves from Verdi’s Nabucco, the aria Nesun Dorma from Puccini’s Turandot or the duet Au Fond du Temple Saint from Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers. All of these are instantly recognisable and greatly loved.

However, attenders of opera performances are often disappointed to discover that numbers such as these are only small sections of considerably longer works that are much less tuneful or interesting. The Pearl Fishers is a case in point; without that one duet the opera would rarely get staged, as its plot is particularly feeble and the rest of the music of much lower quality.

On the other hand, Bizet’s Carmen is full of musical life and invention, as well as erotic intensity and violence. One’s attention is unlikely to flag and, for the raw beginner, a ticket to Carmen would be well worth the money. The opera has, indeed, much in common with the modern musical, and the progression between Carmen and, say, Bernstein’s West Side Story is not difficult to detect, although the latter had Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet as its inspiration.

Opera is a musical form with a very long history, and there is a world of difference between the operas of Handel, Puccini and Benjamin Britten, for example.

Early opera

Early operas were relatively short and consisted of a set of arias (solos), duets and ensemble pieces strung together with passages of “recitative”, by which is meant text sung in a speech rhythm with little attempt at melody. These passages are only there to hold the plot together and provide links between the more melodic elements, but they can be lengthy and, for the beginner, are more likely to be endured than enjoyed. Recitative is also a feature of operas of much later periods.

Most early operas made little attempt to convey dramatic realism, with the performers being required to sing rather than act. The same could also be said of many later operas! If you want to see great acting, the theatre is often a more promising venue than the opera house.

That said, many great operas are also great dramas, and audiences are often spellbound at performances of Tosca or Madame Butterfly, where Puccini’s music has a dramatic intensity that demands a certain amount of acting talent from the performers.

The language problem

One aspect of opera that can be off-putting for the beginner is the fact that relatively few great operas were written in English. Italian is the language of choice for opera libretti. This might have been expected with those by Verdi, Donizetti and Puccini, but the operas of Handel and Mozart, for example, were also written to be sung in Italian. If you do not understand Italian (or German or French, etc) the great European operas might be thought to be unintelligible, but this is not necessarily the case.

For one thing, the drama is often conveyed via actions as well as words. This is a good reason for seeing an opera live as opposed to hearing a recording, much as viewing a ballet makes more sense than listening to it if one wants to know what is going on.

Another point to make is that operas can be regarded as music first and drama second. In other words one goes to an opera for a musical experience rather than to see a play. This is, however, a debatable point.

Many modern opera houses have got round the language problem by displaying translated “surtitles” on a screen above the stage. This has been a controversial move in some quarters, with many people regarding the constantly moving words as an unwelcome distraction. Others regard this as preferable to performing operas in English translation, as the translations do not always match the music as perfectly as the original. It is also the case that many opera singers are better at singing notes than words and it is often difficult to make out what they are singing, whatever the language!

Strange plots

Another aspect of opera to bear in mind is that the plots are sometimes strange in the extreme. Characters are able to fall into the most remarkable predicaments for very peculiar reasons, and likewise escape from them in ways that don’t seem to make a lot of sense. Audiences are required to suspend their disbelief to very great measure, such as when a clearly very healthy and well-built soprano is starving in a garret and dying of tuberculosis in La Boheme, or the Rhine Maidens in Das Rheingold are able to sing when at the bottom of the river!

What to see?

So, what would be a good introductory opera for a beginner to see on stage? Several have already been mentioned, but a good tip might be to go for something shorter rather than longer. The operas of Mozart are a good bet, partly because the music is always a delight, and you can’t have too much Mozart! A performance of The Marriage of Figaro, for example, is worth considering, as is the charming and tuneful Cosi Fan Tutte.

These two operas fall into the category of “opera buffa” or comic opera, as opposed to “opera seria”. The beginner might indeed prefer to start with comedy, as the onstage antics, involving such things as characters assuming disguises or seeking to perform practical jokes on each other, will entertain even if the music does not.

The world of the comic opera can play to very different rules from that of “grand opera”. For one thing, amateur opera companies are far more likely to tackle the works of Gilbert and Sullivan or Offenbach than they are Verdi or Wagner! Amateur performances have the huge advantage of considerably cheaper ticket prices than those of the top professional companies, whose productions can be prohibitively expensive for most people.

That said, a night at the opera at one of the world’s great opera houses is certainly a night to remember. People make a real effort to dress in their finery, possibly combining the event with dinner at a top restaurant. Audience members can usually be assured of a brilliant evening’s entertainment, especially if the company on stage includes some of the world’s great operatic stars.

Whatever the choice, listening to opera, and seeing it on stage, can be an extremely rewarding and memorable experience. A little homework done in advance into the plot might be a good idea, though.


© John Welford

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