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10 - An instinct for parody and a spirit for revolution: Parisian opera, 1752–1800

from PART II - MUSIC FOR THE THEATRE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2011

Simon P. Keefe
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield
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Summary

This chapter first explains why ‘revolution’ is a central term for understanding French operatic culture in the period under investigation. It is historically organized and divided into four sections. The first deals with attempts to bring Italian opera to Paris in the 1750s. The second describes the vicissitudes at two theatres – the Comédie-Italienne and the Opéra-Comique – to establish French opera for a bourgeois and lower-middle-class audience. In the third section we follow the career of Christoph Willibald Gluck from Viennese to Parisian composer in the context of theatrical rivalries and in the final section observe the uncertainties that befell French opera in the Revolutionary period.

Using ‘revolution’ as the central concept for understanding Parisian opera in the second half of the eighteenth century might be regarded as either banal or far-fetched. For although the events of 1789 that have shaped our concept of ‘revolution’ took place within the time-frame of our topic, the question of whether music was one of the causes of those political events, or whether the events in turn brought about a simultaneous revolution in music, remains a subject of debate. Certainly, historic upheavals of such magnitude do not happen overnight, nor could the participants instantly channel the collective energy that overpowered the Bastille on 14 July 1789 into a sustainable ‘volonté générale’, to use Rousseau’s phrase.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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