Vocal Virtuosity: The Origins of the Coloratura Soprano in Nineteenth-Century Opera

Vocal Virtuosity: The Origins of the Coloratura Soprano in Nineteenth-Century Opera

by Sean M. Parr
Vocal Virtuosity: The Origins of the Coloratura Soprano in Nineteenth-Century Opera

Vocal Virtuosity: The Origins of the Coloratura Soprano in Nineteenth-Century Opera

by Sean M. Parr

eBook

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Overview

Nothing strikes the ear quite like a soprano singing in the sonic stratosphere. Whether thrilling, chilling, or repellent to the listener, the reaction to cascades of coloratura with climaxing high notes is strong. Coloratura-agile, rapid-fire singing-was originally essential for all singers, but its function changed greatly when it became the specialty of particular sopranos over the course of the nineteenth century. The central argument of Vocal Virtuosity challenges the historical commonplace that coloratura became an anachronism in nineteenth-century opera. Instead, the book demonstrates that melismas at mid-century were made modern. Coloratura became an increasingly marked musical gesture during the century with a correspondingly more specific dramaturgical function. In exploring this transformation, the book reveals the instigators of this change in vocal practice and examines the historical traces of Parisian singers who were the period's greatest exponents of vertiginous vocality as archetypes of the modern coloratura soprano. The book constructs the historical trajectory of coloratura as it became gendered the provenance of the female singer, while also considering what melismas can signify in operatic performance. As a whole, it argues that vocal virtuosity was a source of power for women, generating space for female authorship and creativity. In so doing, the book reclaims a place in history for the coloratura soprano.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197542668
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/06/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 29 MB
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About the Author

Sean M. Parr is Associate Professor of Music at Saint Anselm College where he teaches music history and voice performance, as well as humanities courses in the core curriculum. With a PhD in Historical Musicology from Columbia University, his research interests focus on nineteenth-century opera, the operatic voice, dance, and gender. His work on singers and singing has been published in the Cambridge Opera Journal, 19th-Century Music, and Current Musicology. He also sings professionally as an operatic tenor and has taught voice for fifteen years.

Table of Contents

List of Tables, Figures, and Examples Acknowledgements About the Companion Website Introduction: Coloratura and Female Vocality Chapter 1: The New Franco-Italian School of Singing Chapter 2: Verdi and the End of Italian Coloratura Chapter 3: Melismatic Madness and Technology Chapter 4: Caroline Carvalho and Her World Chapter 5: Carvalho, Gounod, and the Waltz Chapter 6: Vestiges of Virtuosity: The French Coloratura Soprano Epilogue: Unending Coloratura Bibliography Index
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