Famous Operas
A numerative comparison of German and American opera houses
All things must come from deep within my being
100 Greatest AMERICAN Musicals
Famous German Baritones
Index to Short Biographies of Performers - Part 1: A-B
Europäische Bühnenjahrbücher
Local results for bayern near Grafenwöhr 92655
List of operettas
Famous Operas
Operetta Definition
Zwei-plus-Vier-Vertrag
Opera Houses and Festivals in Germany
Opera Houses and Festivals in Austria
Opera Houses and Festivals in Germany
1600 – 1699
- 1632 Sant'Alessio
(Stefano
Landi) (Rome); first opera on a historical rather than mythological
subject, that breaks new dramatic and musical ground in a number of ways.
1700 – 1799
- 1711 Rinaldo
(Paris); George
Frideric Handel's first opera for the London stage, set during the
Crusades, containing the aria Lascia ch'io pianga.
- 1738 Serse
(London); one of Handel's
last operatic masterpieces before he abandoned the genre for oratorio,
containing perhaps his most famous aria, Ombra mai fu. Francesco
Cavalli had written a major opera to the same libretto in 1654.
- 1767 Alceste
(Vienna); Gluck's
follow-up, today better known in the version he revised for Paris in 1776.
The preface set out his project for reforming opera.
- 1791 The
Magic Flute (Vienna): a German
Singspiel
by Mozart.
Premiered less than three months before his death, the Freemasonry-influenced
fairy tale for adults has become one of the composer's most enduring and
best loved works. It was also a seminal work in the development of German
opera.
1800 – 1849
- 1805 Fidelio
(Ludwig
van Beethoven) (Vienna): The story of Beethoven's only opera reflected
the composer's passionate feelings about the struggle for political liberty
that was sweeping Europe.
- 1829 Guillaume
Tell (Paris): Gioacchino
Rossini's final opera, and the first of the Grand
Operas to remain in the repertory, although its length, together with
the difficulty of the tenor role (Arnold), mean that revivals are
infrequent. The overture
and the summoning of the men of the three cantons are its most famous
passages.
- 1842 Nabucco
(Milan): Giuseppe
Verdi's third opera, and the one which established his reputation,
featuring the (now) famous Hebrews' Chorus, Va' pensiero, sull'ali dorate
(Fly, thought, on golden wings).
- 1842 Ruslan
and Lyudmila (Mikhail
Glinka) (Saint Petersburg); Glinka founded the Russian operatic
tradition with this work based on a Pushkin fairy tale, and his patriotic A
Life for the Tsar.
- 1843 The
Flying Dutchman (Richard
Wagner) (Dresden): With the premiere of this work, Wagner started to
move away from more conventional models of opera towards his own
musico-dramatic form of symphonic commentary interlinked by leitmotifs.
- 1843 Don
Pasquale (Gaetano
Donizetti) (Paris): One of the prolific composer's last operas, this
engaging comedy contains some lovely, lilting melodies.
1850 – 1899
- 1850 Lohengrin
(Richard
Wagner) (Weimar) One of Wagner's most popular operas, Lohengrin
also marks the beginning his move toward through-composed operas.
- 1851 Rigoletto
(Giuseppe
Verdi) (Venice): The censors almost succeeded in preventing its
premiere, and the libretto had to be remodeled to accommodate them. It
contains a few of Verdi's most famous pieces, such as "La donna è
mobile" and the quartet.
- 1853 Il
trovatore (Giuseppe
Verdi) (Rome); containing the famous "Anvil Chorus", in which
the Gypsies' song is accompanied by the clanging of their anvils, Arturo
Toscanini is attributed as saying that all the opera needs is "the
four best singers in the world".
- 1868 Die
Meistersinger von Nürnberg (Munich): Richard
Wagner’s monumental comedy of the burgher mastersingers of 16th
century Nuremberg
was used by the Nazis to glorify German nationalism, but today the universal
humanity of the work is emphasized in productions that have reinforced its
continuing great popularity.
- 1874 Boris
Godunov (Modest
Mussorgsky) (Saint Petersburg): The opera draws on Russian folk music,
rejecting the influence of German and Italian opera. It begins with a brutal
murder, continues with a clever lie and a great invasion, and ends in
guilt-stricken madness and death.
- 1875 Carmen
(Georges
Bizet) (Paris): This Spanish story of a gypsy seductress and her doomed
lover is one of the most popular operas of all time. Its enduring popularity
is due to it being dramatic and psychologically believable, and not without
touches of humour.
- 1876 Der
Ring des Nibelungen (complete tetralogy: Bayreuth): A monumental
tetraology, based on ancient Norse and Germanic myths, in which Wagner
created a new model of opera based on leitmotifs.
Also famous for being extremely long.
- 1878 HMS
Pinafore (London): This was Gilbert
and Sullivan's first great success, and contains the freshest and best
of their affectionate parodies of nineteenth-century Italian opera.
- 1881 Les
contes d'Hoffmann (Jacques
Offenbach) (Paris): Offenbach wrote almost 100 operettas, but this last
work was his only grand opera. Posthumously produced, it tells three
colourful stories about how the devil spoiled his chances for true love.
- 1882 Parsifal
(Richard
Wagner) (Bayreuth) Wagner's final stage work was intended not as opera
but as a "festival play for the consecration of the stage". He and
his descendants prohibited its staging outside Bayreuth until 1903.
- 1887 Otello
(Giuseppe
Verdi) (Milan): Shakespeare's tragic Moor is given a dramatic musical
setting to match the famous story of jealousy and treachery. Iago's
"Credo" and many other chilling and touching moments add to the
impact of the opera.
- 1892 Pagliacci
(Ruggiero
Leoncavallo) (Milan): This beloved story of the tragic clown involves a
play within a play. But fiction turns to reality as the jealous husband
kills his wife and her lover onstage and declares "The comedy is
over".
- 1893 Manon
Lescaut (Giacomo
Puccini) (Turin): This opera brought Puccini to the international stage
and prominence in the opera community, especially since it preceded his
previous opera, Edgar,
which was considered a fiasco at the time.
- 1893 Falstaff
(Giuseppe
Verdi) (Milan): Verdi's last opera, and his only frequently performed
comedy.
- 1896 La
bohème (Giacomo
Puccini) (Turin): Perhaps the opera with most popular appeal, La bohème
masterfully mixes comedy with tragedy and romance, containing a few of
Puccini's most popular melodies.
1900 – 1944
- 1900 Tosca
(Giacomo
Puccini) (Rome): one of the composer's most beloved operas, based on a Sardou
play, "this shabby little shocker" is now more famous than the
original. It's the tragic tale of a trio of protagonists: "Tosca"
the opera diva; "Cavaradosi", her lover, a painter caught up in
political intrigue; and the wicked police chief, Baron "Scarpia",
who desires Tosca and is determined to have her.
- 1904 Madame
Butterfly (Giacomo
Puccini) (Milan): one of the composer's most popular operas, along with La
Boheme and Tosca. It's the tragedy of a Japanese geisha
(Cio-Cio-San) who marries an American
navy lieutenant, Pinkerton. Pinkerton is called back to America, and despite
Cio-Cio-San's faith, he returns to Japan with an American wife.
- 1905 Salome
(Richard
Strauss) (Dresden): This operatic version of Oscar
Wilde's infamous play mixes the outrageous and the sensual, culminating
in a grotesquely beautiful and shocking ending.
- 1910 La
fanciulla del West (New York): Giacomo
Puccini’s cowboy opera version of David
Belasco’s The Girl of the Golden West. Tightly integrated
musically, it has fewer extractable highlights than the earlier operas, but
is one of Puccini’s best works in the theatre.
From 1945
- 1945 War
and Peace (Moscow); Prokofiev's
synthesis of the lyrical scenes of Eugene
Onegin and the historical tableaux of Boris
Godunov into a massive opera which sets love and personal tragedy
against the background of the Russian people's defiance in the face of the
invader.
- 1945 Peter
Grimes (London): the opera which proclaimed Benjamin
Britten as the long-awaited British-born operatic successor to Henry
Purcell. An outsider is ground down by small-town narrow-mindedness and
his own recklessness; especially notable for the important part played by
the chorus.
- 1951 Amahl
and the Night Visitors (Gian
Carlo Menotti) (New York); first opera composed for television. The
one-act opera contains both drama and humour, and the music is tuneful.
These qualities make it a good first opera for children. It is frequently
presented by small opera companies with a modest budget.
- 1987 Nixon
in China (Houston): in the words of composer John
Adams, "part epic, part satire, part a parody of political
posturing, and part serious examination of historical, philosophical, and
even gender issues", also an interplay of "six extraordinary
personalities".
Useful lists are either complete lists or selective lists. This page is a
selective list.
Principal reference
Other sources
- The Oxford Dictionary of Opera, by John Warrack and Ewan West
(1992), 782 pages, ISBN
0-19-869164-5
- ^
Howard Goodall, Big Bangs
See also
- The
Opera Corpus – A list of more than 1,250 operas by more than 360
individual opera composers, arranged by composer, giving a general idea of
the present depth and consistency of coverage of opera on Wikipedia.
- List
of operas – A list of operas with entries in Wikipedia sorted
alphabetically by title.
External links
List of important operas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia