KindofBlue wrote:
Just started listening to it. Mozart's Don Giovanni and The Marriage of Figaro, Wagner's Tristan and Isolde. Not really digging it except for the overtures. Big problem is that the music is simply not memorable. Singing dialogue seems wasted. Would be better, as is the case in musicals, if the dialogue was spoken and the musical numbers were memorable pieces. Maybe it's because I am following along with the libretto the first time around and need to familiarize myself with the plot and scenes before I can fully enjoy the listening experience.
For those of you who are opera fans, did you immediately like it or did you have to 'train' yourself, and if you needed to work on appreciating it, how did that process evolve? I hope it didn't require learning to speak German and Italian or memorizing the libretti.
I found that watching movies that had Mozart's Don Giovanni or the Marriage of Figero really helped to put the stories and the staging in the right context. Milos Forman's "Amadeus" really helped - seeing it in the proper context of what they were, and how they evolved into the grand productions we have today.
The best opera I have seen is when they have the subtitle machines. I was laughing so hard to Barber of Saville tears were rolling down my face and I have seen it several times just for the 'experience in Italian. and I knew the story. . but actually understanding the words at the action was GREAT!
Also Cher in "Moonstruck" has a recurring theme of "La Boheme" and if you know about the story it is fun to watch the movie and see the parts of the opera that is shown in the story. I always thought, oh, how cool, this Italian family KNOWS what the words mean.
I must have listened to Tristan and Isolde hundreds of times. . and Tannhauser! The Ring Cycle. . yes, four nights running on PBS! is sorta slow moving and the Yaggsdradl tree etc. etc, well, I am an Anthropologist so I just put on my 'study' mode and just let it wash over me.
I have a book with all the plots of the great operas. . and I listen to the PBS station locally that carries the Met on Saturdays. . .I have listened since I was a young girl, and read the stories while listening and heard the commentary. . .you have all sorts of opportunities to learn to enjoy!
I always liked the GRAND opera for the SWELLING music and the grandiosity of the stories.
Merle