Book contents
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
Summary
Since the present series of Music Handbooks is younger cousin to an earlier (and continuing) series devoted exclusively to opera, it may seem perverse to include in it a study of a work which most enthusiasts – starting with the composer himself – have regarded as an opera. There is a reason for this but no real excuse. The reason, quite simply, is my own opportunism, backed up by the publishers' tolerance. Invited to contribute to the Cambridge Music Handbooks, I suggested Oedipus rex knowing perfectly well that I could defend the choice on the grounds of the work's notorious generic ambiguity, even though I fully intended to prove beyond doubt that that ambiguity is a myth. It is true, of course, that Oedipus has often been given in concert form, ever since its Paris première on a theatre stage but with no production and no sets or costumes beyond black drapes and sombre garments. Today it is perhaps more often staged than in the past; but it still more than survives as a concert work, and for this reason – if for no other – I hope it will not be thought of me that ‘scripsi quod nefastum est’.
Certainly, no excuse is needed for devoting a whole book to Oedipus. Of all Stravinsky's works outside the popular early ballets, it is perhaps the most widely admired and certainly one of the most frequently played.
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- Stravinsky: Oedipus Rex , pp. ix - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993