Chapter Four - Les Troyens: The Undoing of Opera
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2023
Summary
Berlioz found it easier to make money as a critic than as a composer, and much of his music is essentially critical in character. Les Troyens, for example, can be understood as a critique of opera and a critique of epic.
In the French imagination, opera and epic were only hazily separated. In the Diderot-d’Alembert Encyclopédie, the author of the entry on opera (Louis de Jaucourt) defines opera as follows:
As to its dramatic aspect, an opera is the representation of a marvelous action. It is the divine of the epic turned into spectacle. Since the actors are gods or half-divine heroes, they must declare themselves to mortals through manners of action, diction, and vocal inflection that defy the laws of ordinary probability. They do things that look like wonders. The sky opens, chaos resolves, the elements show themselves in turn, a celestial being is wafted on a luminous cloud; an enchanted palace vanishes at a casual sign and transforms itself into a desert, etc.
We may scratch our heads when we read this, because we’re accustomed to thinking of opera in quite a different way. For Jaucourt, opera was the godhaunted domain of Lully and Rameau, a place of superhuman emphasis of passion and impossibly expensive stage effects. But our most popular operas concern not Juno and Hippolytus and Zoroaster but a Spanish gypsy, a French prostitute, a barber in Seville, a Sicilian roughneck, and a clutch of starving young artists in Paris. If these operas are expensive, it's mostly because good singers aren't easy to come by. The staging itself of Carmen, La traviata, Cavalleria rusticana, La bohème, and so forth doesn't require flying machines, collapsing palaces, or panoramas of chaos resolving itself into cosmos.
And yet, if Jaucourt were hauled into the twenty-first century, he might be able to argue his thesis. Carmen is a gypsy, but an unusually potent kind of gypsy, as Théophile Gautier noted in an 1872 poem:
Carmen is thin,—a streak of black
Circles round her gypsy eye.
Her hair is dangerously black,
Her skin, a devil burned it raw.
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- Information
- Music SpeaksOn the Language of Opera, Dance, and Song, pp. 58 - 71Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2009