Dear Paul, please see below details of a new publication for the Musicology-All list.
With all best wishes for Christmas and the New Year, Clair.
Musical Theatre in Europe 1830-1945
edited by Michela Niccolai and Clair Rowden
Turnhout, Brepols, 2017 (Speculum Musicae 30)
pp. xviii + 480, ISBN 978-2-503-57766-1
http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503577661-1
Contents: http://www.luigiboccherini.org/images/Contents%20SM30.pdf
This volume offers a panoramic vision of the diverse genres of musical theatre 1830-1945
From the mid-1800s in Europe there was a vigorous and enthusiastic expansion of diverse forms of musical theatre. An explosion of different types of venues – the cabarets, music-halls and private theatres – rubbed shoulders with the subsidised and official theatres offering more established types of spectacle, creating a milieu which welcomed a number of new musical and theatrical genres which fed from and into one another. In the midst of this creative dynamism, alongside revues and café-concert spectacles, operetta and its derivative forms took centre stage. This volume offers a panoramic vision of the diverse genres and types of musical theatre which multiplied and blossomed during this period, and is divided into six sections: the revue de fin d’année as a theatrical genre which also influenced all other lighter genres in France during its heyday; dance music in Offenbach’s operettas and his musical recreation of the Parisian soundscape; transformation of the opera repertoire in operetta and revue parodies; Viennese operetta and English operetta and musical comedy from the end of the ‘reign’ of Gilbert and Sullivan until the outbreak of World War II; diverse theatrical practices from Parisian puppet theatre and the posters of musical spectacles in the caf’ conc’, to contemporary Italian operetta before the rise of Fascism, and its dissemination, via the impresario Vittorio Rosi, in Japan. The last section is dedicated to national case studies (Portugal, Ex-Yugoslavia and Spain) of political appropriation, demonstrating ways in which operetta may be studied as a mirror of contemporary society. Offering broad historical chapters juxtaposed with specific case studies, this volume proposes a reading of the diverse genres of ‘musical theatre’ to highlight its energy and modernity.
Michela Niccolai has published the volumes «La Dramaturgie de Gustave Charpentier» (Brepols, 2011), a revised version of her Ph.D. thesis (Saint-Étienne/Pavia, 2008), and more recently «Giacomo Puccini et Albert Carré: "Madame Butterfly" à Paris» (Brepols, 2012). At the University of Montréal (OICRM) she completed a post-doctorate project on the editing of Charpentier’s various musical and social writings.
Clair Rowden is Reader and Deputy Head of School in the School of Music, Cardiff University. Her research deals mainly with opera and nineteenth-century France; her book Republican Morality and Catholic Tradition at the Opera: Massenet’s Hérodiade and Thaïs was published in 2004, and the edited volume Performing Salome, Revealing Stories for Ashgate Interdisciplinary Studies in Opera appeared in 2013.
Dr Clair Rowden
Reader in Musicology
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/people/view/133230-rowden-clair
School of Music
Cardiff University
Corbett Road
Cardiff CF10 3EB
Tel (direct): 029 2087 0462
Fax: 029 2087 4379
Musical Theatre in Europe 1830-1945
http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503577661-1
Performing Salome, Revealing Stories
https://www.routledge.com/products/9781409445678
Book Placement Editor for H-France
http://www.h-france.net
Francophone Music Criticism 1789-1914 member
<http://music.sas.ac.uk/fmc>http://www.fmc.ac.uk<http://www.fmc.ac.uk/>
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