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Giuseppe Verdi: Falstaff

Part of the Cambridge Opera Handbooks series
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This book is a compact, up-to-date guide to the history and construction of Verdi's last - and possibly greatest - opera.

Incorporating the findings of the most recent research, it provides performers, opera enthusiasts, students and scholars alike with a reliable summary of what is currently known about the work.

The book gives a full synopsis of the plot and a detailed account both of Verdi's aims in composing the opera and of how he actually composed it: which portions were difficult for him, which he considered crucial, which were afterthoughts, etc.

Special attention is given to separating the three versions of Falstaff that Verdi approved - versions that are still confused in almost all performances today.

Professor Hepokoski also supplies extensive discussions of Boito's derivation of the plot and text from Shakespeare (and others); of the musical technique and structure of Falstaff; and of Verdi's own guidelines for interpretation, staging and singing.

A guide to critical assessments of the opera illustrates the widely differing receptions the opera has had in the twentieth century, and a concluding essay by Graham Bradshaw discusses Shakespearean aspects of both Otello and Falstaff.

The book contains a bibliography, a discography (by Malcolm Walker), illustrations of the original stage designs and costumes, and extensive musical examples.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521235340 / 9780521235341
Hardback
10/11/1983
United Kingdom
192 pages
138 x 216 mm, 385 grams