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CTyankee

(63,909 posts)
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:42 PM Nov 2020

What is your favorite opera and why?

Here ya go!


23 votes, 0 passes | Time left: Unlimited
Magic Flute
1 (4%)
La Boheme
1 (4%)
Marriage of Figaro
1 (4%)
Aida
1 (4%)
Madam Butterfly
1 (4%)
Turandot
3 (13%)
Other (please name it)
15 (65%)
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
83 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What is your favorite opera and why? (Original Post) CTyankee Nov 2020 OP
No opera is my favorite opera ... mr_lebowski Nov 2020 #1
The Ring ironflange Nov 2020 #2
The heartbreaking beauty of the arias and duets in Butterfly... NRaleighLiberal Nov 2020 #3
I think Peter and the Wolf was an opera, wasn't it? judesedit Nov 2020 #4
No. It's a piece for orchestra with speaker. (Nobody sings.) fierywoman Nov 2020 #13
Oh. Ok. Thanks. lol. It's been so long since I heard it, but I really liked it. judesedit Nov 2020 #41
Peter and the Wolf is an amazing piece! I think Les Mis and Fiddler are musicals (I don't know fierywoman Nov 2020 #51
Well, thanks for cluing me in. I guess it's musicals I prefer. judesedit Nov 2020 #52
I've never seen Les Miz, but... jmowreader Nov 2020 #68
But there are lots of operas with spoken words ... Magic Flute, for one. fierywoman Nov 2020 #69
Probably the web browser unblock Nov 2020 #5
The first opera I ever saw was peacefreak2.0 Nov 2020 #6
Actually, anything by Gilbert and Sullivan unblock Nov 2020 #7
nope it's The Mikado hands down yellowdogintexas Nov 2020 #45
I like H.M.S. Pinafore Stuart G Nov 2020 #57
My favorite wasn't listed - Don Giovanni. The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #8
DG is my favorite, too--for obvious reasons cyclonefence Nov 2020 #18
The Commendatore scene in the last act is just hair-raising! The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #21
Julie Traymore production of magic flute also one of the Ny Mets lastCarmens was quite good IMO lunasun Nov 2020 #9
CARMEN elleng Nov 2020 #10
Carmen is wonderful nt yellowdogintexas Nov 2020 #46
Loved that top one! JudyM Nov 2020 #73
Tosca. But it's hard to name just one. fierywoman Nov 2020 #11
Tommy Cattledog Nov 2020 #12
gmta... cayugafalls Nov 2020 #15
Tommy, The Wall, Quadrophenia and Rocky Horror Picture Show in that order. cayugafalls Nov 2020 #14
can't argue with those. IcyPeas Nov 2020 #59
Traviata BeyondGeography Nov 2020 #16
Verdi's *Falstaff*... First Speaker Nov 2020 #17
Tosca! choie Nov 2020 #19
I lived for life, I lived for love is such a beautiful aria (preceding such a godawful ending!). CTyankee Nov 2020 #26
Played on my radio station today, elleng Nov 2020 #28
I visited laScala and saw part of a rehearsal (from afar, not down close). I was there under CTyankee Nov 2020 #31
I remember those days! elleng Nov 2020 #34
I still want to gt to Barcelona with my daughter. I hope Europe will have us again once Biden is CTyankee Nov 2020 #35
I hope so too! elleng Nov 2020 #37
I'm a mezzo soprano and choie Nov 2020 #79
Anything by Mozart... ProudMNDemocrat Nov 2020 #20
The Pearl Fishers mia Nov 2020 #22
I love that duet altho I have never seen the opera. It's wonderful! CTyankee Nov 2020 #24
My local opera company (Nashville) presented The Pearl Fishers Tanuki Nov 2020 #63
Madama Butterfly. FM123 Nov 2020 #23
Un Bel Di is such a lovely aria. And I adore the opera. CTyankee Nov 2020 #25
The ONLY aria in that opera worth my time, imo! elleng Nov 2020 #27
Yes, just beautiful. When she sings about what it will be like when he returns I cry and cry..... FM123 Nov 2020 #38
Tosca followed closely by Carmen. broiles Nov 2020 #29
Jesus Christ Superstar. Lunabell Nov 2020 #30
Me too Lunabell! choie Nov 2020 #83
I'm kind of a 20th century fan frazzled Nov 2020 #32
Tosca Chipper Chat Nov 2020 #33
Coraggio!................... MyOwnPeace Nov 2020 #36
I don't know much about opera, but Turandot, simply for this.... CurtEastPoint Nov 2020 #39
Shivers DoBotherMe Nov 2020 #61
One Of My RobinA Nov 2020 #77
Gianni Schicchi by Giacomo Puccini Celerity Nov 2020 #40
Suor Angelica, also part of Il Trittico, includes what I think is Puccini's best aria: The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #49
Tosca. Harker Nov 2020 #42
Out the window...what a way to go! CTyankee Nov 2020 #47
It's a fair drop from the ramparts of Castel Sant'Angelo. Harker Nov 2020 #53
All the better! CTyankee Nov 2020 #54
was present during MrsMatt Nov 2020 #75
Oh, dear. Where was this? CTyankee Nov 2020 #76
St. Paul, Minnesota MrsMatt Nov 2020 #78
La Traviata. Amazing singing roles. 58Sunliner Nov 2020 #43
Boris Godunov. johnp3907 Nov 2020 #44
There is a wonderful recording of it, came out in the '80s, The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #48
Einstein On The Beach hurl Nov 2020 #50
I like Glass' Satyagraha, too, and John Adams' Nixon in China. The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #62
Satyagraha is just gorgeous, one of his most emotional works. Akhnaten is cool! hurl Nov 2020 #65
Wagner's "Das Rheingold". Aristus Nov 2020 #55
If you're a fan of Das Rheingold you would probably appreciate this: The Velveteen Ocelot Nov 2020 #56
Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill: Rise and Fall of the City of Mahogonny IcyPeas Nov 2020 #58
Lakme. Iggo Nov 2020 #60
Carmen. Laffy Kat Nov 2020 #64
Der Rosenkavalier. Baltimike Nov 2020 #66
Porgy and Bess NameAlreadyTaken Nov 2020 #67
Britten's "Peter Grimes" is my favorite opera jmowreader Nov 2020 #70
I love "The Marriage of Figaro" Glorfindel Nov 2020 #71
Thanks. I feel so uptight all the time about politics that a brief foray into opera world is welcome CTyankee Nov 2020 #72
couple Marriage of Figaro with Barber of Seville yellowdogintexas Nov 2020 #80
Norma MrsMatt Nov 2020 #74
for sheer hilarity and bawdiness you can't top "Lysistrata" yellowdogintexas Nov 2020 #81
I knw the story and it's perfect for opera! Who wrote the opera? which century? CTyankee Nov 2020 #82

NRaleighLiberal

(60,014 posts)
3. The heartbreaking beauty of the arias and duets in Butterfly...
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:45 PM
Nov 2020

Not huge on opera, but Madame Butterfly, along with Don Giovanni, probably are at the top.

More of a Shostakovich and Mahler listener myself (for classical - heavy on jazz and ambient too)

judesedit

(4,438 posts)
41. Oh. Ok. Thanks. lol. It's been so long since I heard it, but I really liked it.
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 10:44 AM
Nov 2020

Sorry. I'm definitely no opera buff, but I do love Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman. is Les Mis an opera? Or Fiddler on the Roof? I like them, too

fierywoman

(7,683 posts)
51. Peter and the Wolf is an amazing piece! I think Les Mis and Fiddler are musicals (I don't know
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 01:30 PM
Nov 2020

why they aren't considered operas.)

jmowreader

(50,557 posts)
68. I've never seen Les Miz, but...
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 10:18 PM
Nov 2020

...Fiddler is a musical rather than an opera because there is a lot of spoken dialogue in it. An opera has all the dialogue sung.

peacefreak2.0

(1,023 posts)
6. The first opera I ever saw was
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:50 PM
Nov 2020

The Magic Flute. It was performed at the Royal Opera House in London. It was only a few years ago. My friend and I have gone to a few others by local companies. I am sorry that COVID got in the way of seeing more.

yellowdogintexas

(22,250 posts)
45. nope it's The Mikado hands down
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 12:39 PM
Nov 2020

I would go to a live production even if first graders were performing it

check out the version with Eric Idle as Koko

I rest my case

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,681 posts)
8. My favorite wasn't listed - Don Giovanni.
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:52 PM
Nov 2020

But The Magic Flute is a pretty close second. I'm also a big fan of the early Baroque proto-operas like Monteverdi's L'Orfeo and The Return of Ulysses.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,681 posts)
21. The Commendatore scene in the last act is just hair-raising!
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:22 PM
Nov 2020

Some of the best ensemble vocal composition ever. Nobody did opera better than Mozart, before or since, and Don Giovanni was his best.

lunasun

(21,646 posts)
9. Julie Traymore production of magic flute also one of the Ny Mets lastCarmens was quite good IMO
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:52 PM
Nov 2020

All good
What are some of your favs?

fierywoman

(7,683 posts)
11. Tosca. But it's hard to name just one.
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:54 PM
Nov 2020

Why? Maybe because it contains all the bat-shit crazy elements opera is noted for ... AND it's got strong political/feminist issues going on.

cayugafalls

(5,640 posts)
14. Tommy, The Wall, Quadrophenia and Rocky Horror Picture Show in that order.
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 04:57 PM
Nov 2020

The Who invented Rock Opera, so of course there are 2 of theirs in the list as they did it best.

Honorable mention; The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway, Jesus Christ Superstar, Bat Out of Hell (Meat Loaf)

BeyondGeography

(39,370 posts)
16. Traviata
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:14 PM
Nov 2020

The love story hangs together and there’s never a dull moment. Three absolutely great singing roles Violetta/Alfredo/Germont. The Callas/Lisbon recording for maximum Violetta impact.



Tragedy abounds; ie when father is torn apart by his son’s choices in life:

First Speaker

(4,858 posts)
17. Verdi's *Falstaff*...
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:15 PM
Nov 2020

...just stupendous, overwhelming. Verdi is a genius in Shakespeare's own neighborhood...

CTyankee

(63,909 posts)
26. I lived for life, I lived for love is such a beautiful aria (preceding such a godawful ending!).
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:28 PM
Nov 2020

CTyankee

(63,909 posts)
31. I visited laScala and saw part of a rehearsal (from afar, not down close). I was there under
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:39 PM
Nov 2020

unfortunate circumstances. I was traveling in Northern Italy and my passport got stolen so I took a train to Milan where there is an American Consulate to obtain an emergency passport. At the time it cost $100 (in dollars, no Euros and no checks or credit cards!). I learned some things on that trip about what NOT to do again!).

I was surprised that LaScala was so small (maybe I was expecting Lincoln Center!).

elleng

(130,869 posts)
34. I remember those days!
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:52 PM
Nov 2020

Glad I didn't lose my passport; spent junior year of college in England, and traveled to the continent a few times (including Moscow, in the bad old days; had a keeper, and did get to the ballet.)

CTyankee

(63,909 posts)
35. I still want to gt to Barcelona with my daughter. I hope Europe will have us again once Biden is
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:56 PM
Nov 2020

in office and we get the pandemic under control.

elleng

(130,869 posts)
37. I hope so too!
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:57 PM
Nov 2020

DID visit Barcelona, with family, a side-trip from trip around France, when kids were young, daughter entering kindergarten.

choie

(4,111 posts)
79. I'm a mezzo soprano and
Fri Nov 27, 2020, 09:19 PM
Nov 2020

I remember torturing my mother at 16 years old trying to sing Tosca while playing the piano. Uffa!

ProudMNDemocrat

(16,784 posts)
20. Anything by Mozart...
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:19 PM
Nov 2020

Cried during Act 4 of The Marriage of Figaro.

My second favorite was Puccini's TOSCA.

Tanuki

(14,918 posts)
63. My local opera company (Nashville) presented The Pearl Fishers
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 09:17 PM
Nov 2020

a few seasons ago. I loved it!

FM123

(10,053 posts)
38. Yes, just beautiful. When she sings about what it will be like when he returns I cry and cry.....
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 06:19 PM
Nov 2020

Lunabell

(6,080 posts)
30. Jesus Christ Superstar.
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:39 PM
Nov 2020

Last edited Mon Nov 30, 2020, 01:22 AM - Edit history (1)

Contemporary and brilliant. I've known this Opera backwards and forwards since it first hit the scene. I was a born again Christian then, atheist now. But the story, the dance and the message swept me away when I first saw it live.

choie

(4,111 posts)
83. Me too Lunabell!
Mon Nov 30, 2020, 12:16 AM
Nov 2020

If I ever start losing my memory (god forbid) I know the one thing I'll remember is the lyrics and music of "Heaven on their Minds"!

frazzled

(18,402 posts)
32. I'm kind of a 20th century fan
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:42 PM
Nov 2020

From Berg's Wozzeck and Lulu to Schoenberg's Moses und Aron. And even into the 21st century with John Adams's Dr. Atomic. This aria sung by the baritone Gerald Finley (based on John Donne's "Batter My Heart, Three-personed God" ) is absolutely heart-rending in person. The doubt and guilt of having created the atomic bomb.

MyOwnPeace

(16,926 posts)
36. Coraggio!...................
Sat Nov 21, 2020, 05:56 PM
Nov 2020

"Mimi!!!!!!! Mimi!!!!!!!! "La Boheme"




However, the SINGLE, most AMAZING piece from any opera, anywhere:

the "Quartet" from "Rigoletto"




But, there's THIS (Magic Flute) - just the most AMAZING aria!



I'm sorry - but it is just SO unfair to as for a "favorite!"

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,681 posts)
49. Suor Angelica, also part of Il Trittico, includes what I think is Puccini's best aria:
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 01:05 PM
Nov 2020


This one just kills me.

Harker

(14,015 posts)
42. Tosca.
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 11:58 AM
Nov 2020

It starts with a bang, 'Recondita armonia' being sung shortly after the beginning...

Loathesome villain in Scarpia, artistic, loyal heroine in opera singer Floria Tosca... 'Vissi d'arte' one of my favorite Puccini tearjerkers, and he gets me at least once every time.

Cavaradossi working to undermine a despotic regime...

'E lucevan le stella', a powerful testament to the desire to live life with love...

Art, love, drama, tragedy - all in one beautiful, precious composition.

Harker

(14,015 posts)
53. It's a fair drop from the ramparts of Castel Sant'Angelo.
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 02:27 PM
Nov 2020

There's a thousand ways to go in opera.

MrsMatt

(1,660 posts)
75. was present during
Mon Nov 23, 2020, 06:36 PM
Nov 2020

a production where the singer missed the mattress and fell to the stage floor. Fractured her pelvis.

MrsMatt

(1,660 posts)
78. St. Paul, Minnesota
Tue Nov 24, 2020, 06:28 PM
Nov 2020
https://apnews.com/article/d199dc48430c974120d5cc07a47ae1ad

It was quite eerie, when the opera's finale concluded, the curtain remained closed. No curtain call, and then the house lights came up, and we were informed to exit the theatre.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,681 posts)
48. There is a wonderful recording of it, came out in the '80s,
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 01:00 PM
Nov 2020

with Martti Talvela as Boris. It's by far the best recording I've heard of this magnificent opera, which is the Russian-est music I know of.

hurl

(938 posts)
50. Einstein On The Beach
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 01:17 PM
Nov 2020

by Philip Glass. This one probably drives most people nuts, but it changed music for me.

hurl

(938 posts)
65. Satyagraha is just gorgeous, one of his most emotional works. Akhnaten is cool!
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 09:35 PM
Nov 2020

Definitely, and 'Short Ride in a Fast Machine' is another great Adams piece.

Aristus

(66,327 posts)
55. Wagner's "Das Rheingold".
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 03:10 PM
Nov 2020

I know it's just supposed to be a preliminary to the main Ring operas of "Die Walkure", "Siegfried", and "Gotterdammerung". But it's significant for introducing many of the musical motifs that will grow and develop throughout the four-opera cycle.

The impossibly grand and majestic Valhalla theme.

The mournful "Renunciation Of Love" motif. Retired Seattle Opera General Director Speight Jenkins calls it the "Embrace Of Destiny" motif. It's first introduced by Rhinemaiden Wellgunde when singing about the renunciation of love, the condition by which someone can forge an all-powerful Ring from the Rhine gold. But a number of other characters later in the drama sing the theme in situations not related to the renunciation of love.

That brief, heartbreaking moment when Fasolt sings of having the Goddess of Love, Freia, in his household; accompanied sweetly by the oboe, it reveals the tender heart beneath the rough exterior, and makes the audience sympathize with him, in opposition to his evil brother, Fafner.

The sinister, atmospheric hammering of the Nibelungs on their anvils, a reminder that the once carefree metalsmiths have been enslaved by Alberich and his Ring of Power.

There's a lot of incredible stuff packed into two and a half hours.

IcyPeas

(21,860 posts)
58. Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill: Rise and Fall of the City of Mahogonny
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 05:42 PM
Nov 2020

I saw this when I was about 18 years old and never forgot it. it's a satire of a society’s obsession with money, its shallowness, and its hypocrisy, lust and greed. A topic that is understandable in today's world as it was in Brecht's 30s Germany.

Laffy Kat

(16,377 posts)
64. Carmen.
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 09:20 PM
Nov 2020

As I'm most familiar with the music. I had a good friend who was in the Colorado Chorus and gave me free tickets to the rehearsals for many seasons, so I've seen quite a few. I also really like "Samson and Deliah" because it was such a fun production.

jmowreader

(50,557 posts)
70. Britten's "Peter Grimes" is my favorite opera
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 10:31 PM
Nov 2020

And sadly, it's for the most pedestrian of reasons: Peter Grimes is in English. I don't have to sit there with a translated libretto trying to figure out what the hell is going on, because I can't speak any French or Italian and my German and Russian are limited to military terms. If you want to order an artillery barrage I can fix you right up, but if you want to order lunch...well, once we get past "bol'shoj Mac, kartofel i pivo, pozhalusta" I'm pretty much screwed.

Glorfindel

(9,728 posts)
71. I love "The Marriage of Figaro"
Sun Nov 22, 2020, 10:36 PM
Nov 2020

the plot is light-hearted and effervescent and the music is utterly enchanting. A close runner-up for me is Engelbert Humperdinck's "Hansel and Gretel." It's really not just for children!

Thanks for such an interesting question, CTyankee.

CTyankee

(63,909 posts)
72. Thanks. I feel so uptight all the time about politics that a brief foray into opera world is welcome
Mon Nov 23, 2020, 09:59 AM
Nov 2020

I am mentally exhausted by the administration. Music brief tho it may be, always saves me.

yellowdogintexas

(22,250 posts)
80. couple Marriage of Figaro with Barber of Seville
Fri Nov 27, 2020, 09:30 PM
Nov 2020

I love that two composers with distinctly different styles made use of the same characters in two wonderful works.

MrsMatt

(1,660 posts)
74. Norma
Mon Nov 23, 2020, 06:33 PM
Nov 2020

worked for an opera company and once attended a rehearsal where the two singers performing "Mira, o Norma" were in such perfect harmony, I got goosebumps. Doesn't happen often.

yellowdogintexas

(22,250 posts)
81. for sheer hilarity and bawdiness you can't top "Lysistrata"
Fri Nov 27, 2020, 09:31 PM
Nov 2020

I saw it live several years ago and nearly killed myself laughing

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