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- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical
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- From: km34@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu (Keith Moulton)
- Subject: Re: The Met's "Semiramide"
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.233237.18487@news.columbia.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.columbia.edu (The Network News)
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- Reply-To: km34@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu (Keith Moulton)
- Organization: Columbia University
- References: <1jks6fINNk7g@mizar.usc.edu> <1jlat6INNp3u@mizar.usc.edu> <C17MrD.InA@news.udel.edu>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 23:32:37 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical
- Subject: Opera&Hollywood
- Summary:
- Expires:
- Sender:
- Reply-To: km34@cunixf.cc.columbia.edu (Keith Moulton)
- Followup-To:
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Columbia University
- Keywords:
- It has occured to me that if contemporary opera wants to succeed as
- an art form for everyone, and vitally connected to modern culture, it should
- follow the lead of, and even imitate Hollywood.
- I am so disappointed that the New York City Opera could not work out
- a deal with the Star Trek folks to put out 'Star Trek-the Opera.' I forget
- the composer's name, but it's completely finished. My understanding is there
- was a disagreement over rights/royalties, etc. Here is an opera that could be
- done in Swahili, and everyone would _still_ know what was going on.
- Now here's an idea: How about "The Graduate" done as an opera? (you
- can take my idea if you give me credit:). No special effects are needed,
- and the characters and situations are immediately discernible to anyone who
- is aware of the significance of the cultural devlopments of the 60s.
- Of course, there is no need to copy the movies outright; but, at least
- some attempt should be made by librettists to mould their characters and
- situations from contemporary culture. Consider the hit, "Ghosts of
- Versailles" which takes all its material from before 1800! I liked it very
- much, however, most of my generation doesn't know who Marie Antoinette was
- let alone Beaumarchais.
- Opera was not intended to be an "intellectual" art, and the art of
- Hollywood most certainly is not. It is only because of our distance from
- those opera-producing cultures in time that we have to "do a little homework"
- to enjoy opera to the same extent that those in, say, Mozart's time did. Of
- course, I may be wrong. Librettos concerning recent historical figures seems
- to me to be in the right direction (Malcolm X, Nixon, etc.), but still a
- cop out.
-
- Keith Moulton.
-
-