ABSTRACT

Studies in the history of French nineteenth-century stage music have blossomed in the last decade, encouraging a revision of the view of the primacy of Austro-German music during the period and rebalancing the scholarly field away from instrumental music (key to the Austro-German hegemony) and towards music for the stage. This change of emphasis is having an impact on the world of opera production, with new productions of works not heard since the nineteenth century taking their place in the modern repertory.

This awakening of enthusiasm has come at something of a price. Selling French opera as little more than an important precursor to Verdi or Wagner has entailed a focus on works produced exclusively for the Paris Opéra at the expense of the vast range of other types of stage music produced in the capital: opéra comique, opérette, comédie-vaudeville and mélodrame, for example. The first part of this book therefore seeks to reintroduce a number of norms to the study of stage music in Paris: to re-establish contexts and conventions that still remain obscure. The second and third parts acknowledge Paris as an importer and exporter of opera, and its focus moves towards the music of its closest neighbours, the Italian-speaking states, and of its most problematic partners, the German-speaking states, especially the music of Weber and Wagner.

Prefaced by an introduction that develops the volume’s overriding intellectual drivers of cultural exchange, genre and institution, this collection brings together twelve of the author’s previously published articles and essays, fully updated for this volume and translated into English for the first time.

chapter |8 pages

Ouverture

Power, licence and technology

chapter 1|44 pages

The music of power

Parisian opera and the politics of genre, 1806–1864

chapter 2|51 pages

Grand opéra – petit opéra

Parisian opera and ballet from the Restoration to the Second Empire

chapter 3|27 pages

Jacques Offenbach

The music of the past and the image of the present

chapter 4|34 pages

The operas of François-Auguste Gevaert

The tour d’horizon

chapter 5|56 pages

Between Opéra-Comique and Opéra-National

Scribe, Vaëz and Boisselot c1850

chapter |3 pages

Premier entr’acte

Les ultramontains

chapter 6|3 pages

Beethoven and Rossini

Opera and concert at the end of the Restoration

chapter 7|18 pages

‘Il n’y a qu’un Paris au monde, et j’y reviendrai planter mon drapeau!’

Rossini’s second grand opéra

chapter 8|45 pages

A transalpine comedy

L’elisir d’amore and cultural transfer

chapter 9|23 pages

Partners in rhyme

Alphonse Royer, Gustave Vaëz, and foreign opera in Paris during the July Monarchy

chapter |2 pages

Second entr’acte

La musique allemande

chapter 11|15 pages

Gluck, politics and the Second Empire press

chapter 12|41 pages

Wagner and Paris

The case of Rienzi (1869)

chapter |4 pages

Strette

Censors and others