An edition of First Intermissions (1995)

First intermissions

twenty-one great operas explored, explained, and brought to life from the Met

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Last edited by MARC Bot
18 hours ago | History
An edition of First Intermissions (1995)

First intermissions

twenty-one great operas explored, explained, and brought to life from the Met

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

As many as eight to ten million music lovers in the United States, Canada, and Europe have heard the moving words of Father Owen Lee during the first intermissions of the Saturday afternoon operas broadcast live from the Metropolitan Opera in New York.

His illuminating, intensely personal, immediately accessible half hours on the air have brought grateful letters by the thousand from both first-time listeners and veterans of fifty years of Met broadcast listening, from professors of music, art, literature, psychology, and science as well as from the general public.

Now First Intermissions makes available for the first time in print, twenty-one of Father Lee's finest radio talks, analyses of some of the best loved operas in the repertoire, including masterworks by Mozart, Verdi, Wagner, Puccini, and Strauss. This is a book that brims full with opera lore, with the love of fine music, and with an abundance of good humor.

Above all, it relates opera to the human condition, to our capacity for good and evil, our sorrows and joys, our myths and beliefs, our personal triumphs and tragedies. Here are new ways of understanding the problem of evil in Verdi's Othello, the quest for self-realization in Wagner's Parsifal, the sense of Virgilian tears in Berlioz's Les Troyens, the irreversibility of time in Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier.

  1. Each of these "first intermissions" explores a new idea with uncommon insight and clarity. Each relates opera to life. Aida, Lohengrin, Faust, and La Boheme are all, for Father Lee, dramas that sing of "the love and tears of great-hearted people who, we think humbly when the music is done, are not all that different from ourselves."
Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
248

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: First Intermissions
First Intermissions: Commentaries from the Met Revised and Enlarged Edition
August 1, 2004, Limelight Editions
Paperback in English - Rev Exp edition
Cover of: First intermissions
First intermissions: commentaries from the Met broadcasts
2002, Limelight Editions
in English - 1st Limelight ed., Rev. and enl. ed
Cover of: First Intermissions
First Intermissions: Twenty-One Great Operas Explored, Explained, and Brought to Life From the Met
April 11, 1996, Oxford University Press, USA
in English
Cover of: First intermissions

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 227-231), discography and videography (p. 233-240), and index.
Based on the author's intermission commentaries from Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
782.1/015
Library of Congress
MT95 .L514 1995, MT95.L514 1995

The Physical Object

Pagination
xv, 248 p. :
Number of pages
248

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1086189M
Internet Archive
firstintermissio0000leem_d5b8
ISBN 10
0195092554
LCCN
94010113
OCLC/WorldCat
30030714
Library Thing
102452
Goodreads
3664980

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December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page