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Orfeo

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Orfeo Synopsis

This book explains how and why Gluck's historically important and best-loved opera Orfeo came into existence, and shows why it has retained its popularity. The work is placed in its context of Gluck's 'reform of opera', an artistic movement involving actors, dancers, designers, writers and philosophers, as well as musicians and librettists. Patricia Howard and her fellow contributors describe how the opera has been reinterpreted throughout the past two hundred years from its first performance. Differing twentieth-century views based on practical experience of the work are put forward by the conductors John Eliot Gardiner and Sir Charles Mackerras, the singer Kevin Smith and the English National Opera music consultant Tom Hammond.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521228275
Publication date:
Author: Patricia Howard, Christoph Willibald Gluck
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 143 pages
Series: Cambridge Opera Handbooks
Genres: Opera