A user's guide to opera—Matthew Aucoin, "the most promising operatic talent in a generation" (The New York Times Magazine), describes the creation of his groundbreaking new work, Eurydice, and shares his reflections on the past, present, and future of opera
From its beginning, opera has been an impossible art. Its first practitioners, in seventeenth-century Florence, set themselves the unreachable goal of reproducing the wonders of ancient Greek drama, which no one can be sure was sung in the first place. Opera's greatest artists have striven to fuse multiple art forms—music, drama, poetry, dance—into a unified synesthetic experience. The composer Matthew Aucoin, a rising star of the opera world, posits that it is this impossibility that gives opera its exceptional power and serves as its lifeblood. The virtuosity required of its performers, the bizarre and often spectacular nature of its stage productions, the creation of a whole world whose basic fabric is music—opera assumes its true form when it pursues impossible goals.
The Impossible Art is a passionate defense of what is best about opera, a love letter to the form, written in the midst of a global pandemic during which operatic performance was (literally) impossible. Aucoin writes of the rare works—ranging from classics by Mozart and Verdi to contemporary offerings of Thomas Adès and Chaya Czernowin—that capture something essential about human experience. He illuminates the symbiotic relationship between composers and librettists, between opera's greatest figures and those of literature. Aucoin also tells the story of his new opera, Eurydice, from its inception to its production on the Metropolitan Opera's iconic stage. The Impossible Art opens the theater door and invites the reader into this extraordinary world.
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December 7, 2021 -
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- ISBN: 9780374721589
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- ISBN: 9780374721589
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- English
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Reviews
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Library Journal
July 1, 2021
A composer, conductor, and pianist, MacArthur Fellow Aucoin helps us better understand opera--The Impossible Art--by chronicling the creation of his opera Eurydice from its beginnings to its premiere at New York's Metropolitan Opera. Son of celebrated bandleader Eddy Duchin and a famed bandleader himself, Duchin decided after enduring both a stroke and a case of COVID-19 to Face the Music and relate not just his glamorous life but the sorrow of never getting to know his busy father and the mother who died when he was six days old. Two-time Emmy Award winner Gless recounts her five decades in Hollywood in Apparently There Were Complaints (75,000-copy first printing). Former Knopf and New Yorker editor Gottlieb's Garbo offers not just a biography of the iconic movie star but a study of her far-reaching impact on film and culture (25,000-copy first printing).
Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
October 15, 2021
Aucoin speaks eloquently from his own experience as composer, conductor, writer, and pianist. Opera, he writes, is impossible because its vision of being a synthesis of all the arts is itself an impossible goal. Yet what drives opera's artists is the pursuit of "this permanently elusive alchemy." Aucoin looks at opera history, traces the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice in opera through the ages, and discusses Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress as well as Verdi's Shakespeare operas and two contemporary operas, Thomas Ad�s' The Exterminating Angel and Chaya Czernowin's Heart Chamber. He offers the composer's viewpoint by telling the stories of two of his own operas: Crossing, which features the words of Walt Whitman, and Eurydice, written with playwright Sarah Ruhl, with whom he is in conversation here. Eurydice premiered at the Los Angeles Opera in 2020 and is scheduled for a future production at the Metropolitan Opera. With substantial lists of works cited and recommended recordings, Aucoin's insightful and informative opera history will engage everyone interested in music, including students and opera fans.COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
December 1, 2021
Composer Aucoin's personal reflection on and guide to opera has the perfect title; in the book's preface, he writes that opera's (arguably) impossible feat is capturing human ideas and emotions. The book's chapters can be read out of order, but each has a distinct relationship to the penultimate chapter, which explores Aucoin's key operatic work, Eurydice (commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera in 2020). In an earlier chapter, Aucoin analyzes other works inspired by the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice; he also examines the Verdi operas that were based on plays by Shakespeare (Otello; Falstaff). Aucoin's expressive language conveys his passion for opera and its influence on his life. For each composer, librettist, or composition the book discusses, he explains what made them groundbreaking and new and what made them similar to their operatic predecessors. VERDICT Opera lovers will be delighted by this conversational, memoir-style book from an author who has spent years studying and writing in the art form.--Elizabeth Berndt-Morris, Loeb Music Lib., Harvard Univ., Cambridge
Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Kirkus
Starred review from November 1, 2021
An opera composer shares his love for "this maddening, outlandish, impossible art form." Aucoin, a MacArthur fellow and the composer of operas about Walt Whitman and the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, fell in love with the art form while growing up in suburban Boston during the 1990s and early 2000s. In this exceptional book, he describes what he calls opera's impossibility, "the unattainability of its attempt to gather every artistic medium and every human sense into a single unified experience." He offers "a practitioner's view" of opera in essays that "draw extensively on my experience as composer, conductor, pianist, and vocal coach." His passion is evident in every chapter, starting with an introduction on opera's basic ingredients, including "the most primal human needs: song and narrative." From there, he offers learned readings of earlier works about the Orpheus myth; Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress; Verdi's three Shakespeare operas; and two contemporary operas that give him hope for the genre's future: Thomas Ad�s' The Exterminating Angeland Chaya Czernowin's Heart Chamber. Also included are chapters on the inspirations for his own operas, including Walt Whitman's Civil War diaries and the Eurydice play by Sarah Ruhl that "retells the Orpheus and Eurydice myth through the eyes of its heroine." Aucoin has a gift for accessible writing that mixes technical detail with descriptions that make the material unintimidating, as when he approvingly notes W.H. Auden's "ready-for-RuPaul's-Drag-Race affronts to good taste" in his libretto for The Rake's Progressor when he writes that Marc-Antoine Charpentier's La descente d'Orph�e aux enfershas harmonies that "might have struck a seventeenth-century audience as twangingly dissonant, but to modern ears the whole thing sounds positively groovy...the Beach Boys on the shores of Hell." The author is often clever, as when he justifies barely mentioning Wagner in this book: "That guy gets enough airtime elsewhere." An inspirational trip through highlights of 400 years of opera.COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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