Books

Vocal heroes for the people

Two massive volumes on opera by Jewish enthusiasts offer a wealth of information and expertise, as well as rubbishing the misleading ‘elite’ tag

December 3, 2009 10:44
William Shimmel in Jonathan Miller’s 1985 ENO production of Mozart’s Don Giovanni (libretto by da Ponte)

By

Stephen Pollard,

Stephen Pollard

2 min read

Opera for everybody: The Story of English national Opera
By Susie Gilbert
Faber and Faber, £25

The Gilded Stage: A Social History of Opera
By Daniel Snowman
Atlantic Books, £40

Daniel Snowman’s hugely informative, and equally enjoyable, “social history of opera” begins with a sentiment with which most genuine opera lovers will surely concur: “Sometimes, I am tempted to start a campaign to abolish the word opera altogether. After all, it simply means a work, But for many it has become heavily loaded with resonances of grandeur, wealth and ‘elitism’ (another word I would like to abolish).” Quite.

There is something deeply depressing about the notion, still prevalent in certain quarters, of opera as an exclusive art form, with a deliberate cachet designed to keep the charmed classes in and the oiks out.

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