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First Intermissions: Twenty-One Great Operas Explored, Explained, and Brought to Life From the Met
 
 
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First Intermissions: Twenty-One Great Operas Explored, Explained, and Brought to Life From the Met [Hardcover]

M. Owen Lee (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

January 12, 1995
Millions of opera fans tune in faithfully to the Metropolitan Opera's famous Saturday radio series. One of the program's highlights occurs during the first intermission, when invited speakers offer live, stimulating commentary on the opera aired that day. And for the last twelve years one of the most popular guests on this program has been M. Owen Lee, a Catholic priest and classics scholar, who has emerged as a brilliant and engaging speaker with a gift for making opera relevant to modern concerns. Now, in First Intermissions, Father Lee presents twenty-one of his finest radio talks, illuminating some of the best loved operas in the current repertoire, including masterworks by Mozart, Verdi, Wagner, Puccini, and Strauss.
This is a book that brims with opera lore, with the love of fine music, and with an abundance of good humor. Father Lee writes brilliantly about the music itself, offering insights into composition that even a novice can grasp and enjoy. But for Father Lee, opera is more than beautiful music. Opera is about the human condition, our capacity for good and evil, our unconscious thoughts and conscious actions, our sorrows and our joys, our stories, our myths, and our personal triumphs and tragedies. It is great art confronting life head on: the conflict between fathers and children in Verdi, the irreversibility of time in Strauss, or the quest for self-realization in Wagner. Father Lee brings the real story of opera to life--great stories that make us see beyond the plot and feel the music as a blow to the heart. What also strikes the reader about Father Lee's style is that it is very intimate, not only sprinkled with personal anecdotes (such as saving pennies in Depression-era Detroit to buy sheet music from Sears and Roebuck), but informed throughout by his open-hearted response to opera's magic. Father Lee's love of opera shines through these pieces, and his enthusiasm is contagious, sending readers straight to their record collections--or the nearest record store--to savor once again the marvels of opera.
When Father Owen Lee first appeared on the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts, he was given two criteria. "I could say anything I pleased," he recalls, "so long as (1) it was instantly intelligible to the little old lady in Dubuque and the little old gentleman in Des Moines and (2) it was something no one anywhere, of either sex or any age, had ever thought of before." Whether discussing Puccini's La Boheme or Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier or Gounod's Faust, Father Lee remains utterly original and always in touch with the little old lady in Dubuque.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Despite the limitations of the format-intermission commentary drawn from the Texaco-Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts between 1984 and 1993-this collection makes rewarding casual reading. Lee, a Catholic priest and a Canadian classics professor, is an inspired guide to the operas considered, with separate chapters devoted to each of six Verdi operas, five by Wagner, three by Strauss, two by Puccini, one by Mozart and a chapter encompassing four French operas. He views Die Meistersinger as a master song in itself and notes its peculiarity in the Wagner canon for turning the listener outward rather than inward. No composer, shows Lee, reads our hearts as deeply as Verdi, especially in his depictions of fathers and their children (Rigoletto and Gilda; the Germonts). Puccini, on the other hand, is an executioner-Tosca with its firing squad; La Fanciulla del West, a lynch mob-darkly interested in the suffering of his characters. Lee's radio talks deserve their recovery from the ether. Illustrated.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

These 21 commentaries were originally presented by Lee (a priest and professor of classics) during the first intermissions of Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts. As a result, the essays are brief, diffuse, personal, and always very readable. A thesis that Lee rises to repeatedly is that the emotion of opera depends on the marriage of libretto and score, story and melody. Yet, though these intelligent meanderings provide excellent material for anyone experiencing a new love for this art form, The New Grove Dictionary of Opera (LJ 2/15/93) and other, less notable sources cover this territory with greater scholarship and breadth. Mozart, for example, is not treated extensively because most of his operas are in two acts and the Met preempted Lee during those single intermissions for other programming. Still, an opera neophyte will find amusement and joy in Lee's comments on Wagner and Verdi. Recommended for public libraries and general undergraduate collections.
Steven R. Harris, Lousiana State Univ., Baton Rouge
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; First Edition edition (January 12, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195092554
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195092554
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6.2 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,198,566 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Opera Essays, August 31, 2001
By 
Stephen M. Kerwick (Wichita, KS United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Listeners to the Saturday afternoon Metropolitan Opera broadcasts will be familiar with the wonderful talks that Father Owen Lee has given once or twice a season over the past two decades. These essays are largely either transcriptions or, perhaps, more detailed revisions of those talks by Father Lee, a classics professor at the University of Toronto specializing in Vergil. If you, as I did, found those talks wonderful, but didn't record them, this book (and his other work on Wagner) is a godsend. Lee's skill as an essayist, blending profound literary, psychological and artistic insights with some personal recollections, is absolutely of the first order. This is as fine a collection of its sort as is available on the market. It certainly should not be out of print.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
opera seria
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Die Meistersinger, Hans Sachs, Der Rosenkavalier, Don Carlo, Die Frau, Richard Strauss, The Flying Dutchman, Copyright Renewed, Des Grieux, French Opera, Miss Prism, Les Troyens, Gounod's Faust, Holy Grail, John the Baptist, The Magic Flute, Don Giovanni, Goethe's Faust, Les Contes, Ave Maria, King Philip, King Lear, Trojan War, Adolph Fürstner, Simon Boccanegra
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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