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The Paris Foire St Germain, circa 1763, after the fire of 1762.
The Paris Foire St Germain, circa 1763, after the fire of 1762.
[[File:Foire saint-laurent.jpg|340 px|right|]]
[[File:Foire saint-laurent.jpg|340 px|right|]]
Revision as of 03:02, 1 June 2009
Théâtre de la foire
The Paris Foire St Germain, circa 1763, after the fire of 1762.
Nicolet's theatre at the Foire St Laurent, circa 1786.
In the early 18th century, the Théâtre de la foire - a collective name for the theatres at the annual fairs at St Germain, St Laurent (see illustration below) and later, St Ovide - offered performances with both music and spoken dialogue. First called comédie en vaudeville, these developed into the opéra comique. The Théâtre de la foire appeared in London in the 1720s, to be imitated in the form of the English ballad opera, which in turn stimulated the creation of the German Singspiel.
This is an inclusive glossarylist of opera genres, giving alternative names.
'Opera' is an Italian word (short for 'opera in musica'), however it was not commonly used in Italy (or indeed in other countries) to refer to the genre of particular works. Most composers used more precise designations to present their work to the public. Often specific genres of opera were commissioned by theatres or patrons (in which case the form of the work might deviate more or less from the genre norm, depending on the inclination of the composer). Opera genres were not exclusive. Some operas are regarded as belonging to several. In the case of doubt the only authority is, ultimately, the composer himself. [1]
Definitions
Opera genres have been defined in different ways, not always in terms of stylistic rules. Some, like opera seria, refer to traditions identified by later historians [2], while others, like Zeitoper, have been defined by their own inventors. Other forms have been associated with a particular theatre, for example opéra comique at the theatre of the same name, or opéra bouffe at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens.
This list does not include terms that are unhistorical, or vague and merely descriptive, such as 'rescue opera' [3], 'comic opera' [4], 'sacred opera', 'tragic opera' or 'one-act opera' etc. Original language terms are given to avoid the ambiguities that would be caused by English translations.
List
Genre
Language
Description
First known example
Major works
Last known example
Notable composers
Refs.
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Azione sacra || Italian ||Literally, 'sacred action'. 17th and early 18th century opera with religious subject. Performed at Vienna court. || || L'humanità redenta (Draghi, 1669) || || Draghi, Bertali, Pietro Andrea Ziani, Giovanni Battista Pederzuoli, Cesti || [5]
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Azione sepolerale || Italian ||alternative name for azione sacra || || || || || [5]
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Small-scale one-act opera, or musical play. Early form of chamber opera. Popular in late 17th and 18th centuries. (See also festa teatrale, a similar genre but on a larger scale.)
Entertainment originating in 18th-century London as a reaction against Italian opera. Early examples used existing popular ballad tunes set to satirical texts. Also popular in Dublin and America, Influenced the German Singspiel, and subsequently 20th-century opera.
Entertainment in Paris fair theatres at the end of the 17th century, mixing popular vaudeville songs with comedy. In the 18th century, developed into the opéra comique, while influencing directly the English ballad opera and indirectly the German Singspiel.
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Comédie lyrique || French || Literally, 'lyric comedy'. 18th century: description used by Rameau. 19th century: alternative name for opéra lyrique. || || Platée (1745), Les Paladins (1760) || || Rameau || [6]
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Dramma bernesco || Italian || alternative name foropera buffa || || || || || [7]
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Dramma comico || Italian || alternative name foropera buffa, 18th/early 19th century. Also used for the genre that replaced it from mid 19th century, with the elimination of recitatives. || || || || || [7]
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Dramma comico per musica || Italian || alternative name for dramma comico || || || || ||
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Dramma di sentimento || Italian || alternative name foropera semiseria || || || || || [5]
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Literally, 'jocular drama'. Mid 18th century form that developed out of the opera buffa, marked by the addition of serious, even tragic roles and situations to the comic ones. (Effectively a sub-genre of opera buffa in the 18th century.) [8]
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Dramma giocoso per musica || Italian || full term fordramma giocoso || || || || ||
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Dramma pastorale || Italian ||Literally, 'pastoral drama'. Used for some of the earliest operas down to the 18th century. || || Eumelio (Agazzari, 1606), La fede riconosciuta (A Scarlatti, 1710) || || A Scarlatti, Sarti || [5]
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Dramma per musica || Italian || commonly-used name foropera seria. || || || || || [5]
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Episode lyrique || French ||alternative name for opéra lyrique || || || || || [5]
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Fait historique || French ||Late 18th/19th century. Opéra or opéra comique based on French history, especially popular during the revolution. || L'incendie du Havre (1786)|| Joseph Barra (Grétry 1794), Le pont de Lody (Méhul 1797), Milton (1804)|| || Grétry, Méhul, Spontini || [5][9]
Literally, 'farce'. A form of one-act opera, sometimes with dancing, associated with Venice, especially the Teatro San Moisè, in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
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Geistliche Oper || German ||Literally, 'sacred opera'. Genre invented by the Russian composer Anton Rubinstein for his German-language, staged opera-oratorios.|| Das verlorene Paradies (Rubinstein, 1856) || Der Thurm zu Babel (1870), Sulamith (1883), Moses (1894) || Christus (Rubinstein, 1895) || Rubinstein || [12]
19th-century genre, usually with 4 or 5 acts, large-scale casts and orchestras, and spectacular staging, often based on historical themes. Particularly associated with the Paris Opéra (1820s to c. 1850), but similar works were created in other countries.
Comic relief inserted between acts of opere serie in the early 18th century, typically involving slapstick, disguises etc. Spread throughout Europe In the 1730s. Predated Opera buffa.
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Liederspiel || German || Literally 'song-play'. Early 19th century genre in which existing lyrics, often well-known, were set to new music and inserted into a spoken play. || Lieb' und Treue (Reichardt, 1800)|| Kunst und Liebe (Reichardt, 1807)|| || ReichardtLindpaintner ||[14]
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Lokalposse || German || Specialized form of Posse mit Gesang concentrating on daily life themes, associated with the playwright Karl von Marinelli. || || || || ||[5]
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Märchenoper || German || 'Fairy-tale opera', a genre of 19th century opera usually with a supernatural theme. Similar to Zauberoper.|| || Hänsel und Gretel (1893) || || Humperdinck, Siegfried Wagner || [11]
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Märchenspiel || German || alternative name for Märchenoper|| || || || || [11]
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Melodramma serio || Italian || alternative name for opera seria|| || || || ||
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Musikdrama || German || Term associated with the later operas of Wagner but repudiated by him. [16] Nevertheless widely used by post-Wagnerian composers. || || Tiefland (1903), Salome (1905), Der Golem (d'Albert 1926)|| || d'Albert, Richard Strauss || [5][16]
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Major genre of comic opera in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Originating in Naples (especially the Teatro dei Fiorentini), its popularity spread during the 1730s, notably to Venice where development was influenced by the playwright/librettist Goldoni. Typically in three acts, unlike the intermezzo. Contrasting in style, subject matter, and the use of dialect with the formal, aristocratic opera seria.
Literally, 'comic opera'. Genre including arias, a certain amount of spoken dialogue (and sometimes recitatives). Closely associated with works written for the ParisOpéra-Comique. Themes included were serious and tragic, as well as light. Tradition developed from popular early 18th century comédies en vaudevilles and lasted into 20th century with many changes in style.
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Opéra lyrique || French || Literally, 'lyric opera'. Late 18th/19th century, less grandiose than grand opéra, but without the spoken dialogue of opéra comique. (Term applied more to the genre as a whole than individual operas.)|| || || || Gounod, Ambroise Thomas, Massenet || [5]
Literally, 'semi-serious opera'. Early/mid 19th century genre employing comedy but also, unlike opera buffa, pathos, often with a pastoral setting. Typically included a basso buffo role.
Literally, 'serious opera'. Dominant style of opera in the 18th century, not only in Italy but throughout Europe (except France). Rigorously formal works using texts, mainly based on ancient history, by poet-librettists led by Metastasio. Patronized by the court and the nobility. Star singers were often castrati.
Literally, 'little opera'. The earliest Offenbachian operettas in English were written by Sullivan (later with Gilbert), who nevertheless called them 'comic operas' or Savoy operas. Later works influenced the rise of musical theatre.
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Opérette vaudeville (or vaudeville opérette) || French || Subgenre of French opérette.||L'ours et le pacha (Hervé, 1842) || Mam'zelle Nitouche (1883)|| || Hervé, Victor Roger || [25]
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Literally 'a pie' or a hotchpotch. An adaptation or localization of an existing work that is loose, unauthorized, or inauthentic. Also used for a single work by a number of different composers, particularly in early 18th-century London.
Literally, 'farce with singing'. Popular entertainment of late 18th/early 19th centuries, associated with Vienna, Berlin and Hamburg. Similar to the Singspiel, but with more action and less music.
Der Alpenkönig und der Menschenfeind (Raimund, 1828)
Early 19th-century German genre derived from earlier French opéras comiques, dealing with 'German' themes of nature, the supernatural, folklore etc. Spoken dialogue, originally included with musical numbers, was eventually eliminated in works by Richard Wagner.
Literally, 'farce' or 'titbit'. 17th/18th century genre of comic opera similar to the Italian intermezzo, performed together with larger works. Popular in Madrid in the latter 18th century. During 19th century, the Sainete was synonymous with género chico.
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Saynète ||French || French for sainete. Description used for a particular style of opérette in the 19th century.|| || La caravane de l'amour (Hervé, 1854), Le rêve d'une nuit d'été (Offenbach, 1855), Le valet de coeur (Planquette, 1875) || || Hervé, Offenbach, Planquette || [27]
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Schauspiel mit Gesang || German || Literally, 'play with singing'. Term used by Goethe for his early libretti, though he called them Singspiele when revising them. ||Erwin und Elmire (Goethe 1775)|| Liebe nur beglückt (Reichardt, 1781), Die Teufels Mühle am Wienerberg (Müller 1799) || || ||[28]
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Schuloper || German || Literally, 'school opera'. Early 20th century, opera created for performance by school children. || || Der Jasager (1930), Wir bauen eine Stadt (Hindemith, 1930) || || Weill, Hindemith || [29]
Literally, 'song play'. Popular genre of the 18th/19th centuries, (though the term is also found as early as the 16th century). Derived originally from translations of Englishballad operas, but also influenced by French opéra comique. Spoken dialogue, combined with ensembles, folk-coloured ballads and arias. Originally performed by traveling troupes. Plots generally comic or romantic, often including magic. Developed into German 'rescue opera' and romantische Oper.
Literally, 'opera play'. 19th-century light opera genre, derived from Singspiel and to a lesser extent opéra comique, containing spoken dialogue. Spieltenor and Spielbass are specialized voice types connected with the genre.
Literally, 'little tune'. 18th century miniature satirical genre, for one or more singer, that developed out of the sainete. Performed in between longer works.
17th/18th century lyric genre with themes from Classical mythology and the Italian epics of Tasso and Ariosto, not necessarily with tragic outcomes. Usually 5 acts, sometimes with a prologue. Short arias (petits airs) contrast with dialogue in recitative, with choral sections and dancing.
Dating back to the 17th century and forward to the present day, this form includes both singing and spoken dialogue, also dance. Local traditions are also found in Cuba and the Philippines.
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Zauberoper || German || Literally, 'magic opera'. Late 18th and early 19th centuries, particularly associated with Vienna. Heavier, more formal work than Zauberposse, but also with spoken dialogue. ||Oberon, König der Elfen (Wranitzky, 1789) || Die Zauberflöte (1791), Das Donauweibchen, (Kauer, 1798)|| || Kauer, Müller, Schubert||[5]
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Zauberposse || German || Specialized form of Posse mit Gesang concentrating on magic. || || Der Barometermacher auf der Zauberinsel (Müller 1823)|| || Müller ||[5]
Literally, 'opera of the times'. 1920s, early 1930s genre, using contemporary settings and characters, including references to modern technology and popular music.
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Zwischenspiel || German || German name for intermezzo || || || || || [5]
See also
The following cover other forms of entertainment that existed around the time of the appearance of the first operas in Italy at the end of the 16th century, which were influential in the development of the art form:
^ McClymonds, Marita P and Heartz, Daniel: Opera seria in 'The New Grove Dictionary of Opera', ed. Stanley Sadie (London, 1992) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
^"'Rescue opera' is an unhistorical term of limited usefulness. It is not an authentic genre like 'opera buffa', and was coined only in the later 19th or early 20th century", Charleton, David: Rescue opera in 'The New Grove Dictionary of Opera', ed. Stanley Sadie (London, 1992) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
^"A general name for an operatic work in which the prevailing mood is one of comedy."The Oxford Dictionary of Opera, by John Warrack and Ewan West (1992), 782 pages, ISBN 0-19-869164-5