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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 711<br />

ertheless rash to generalize. Out of the countless number of works on ancient<br />

themes, we list only a few by some major composers as representative.<br />

Charles Gounod (1818-1893), most famous for his Faust and Romeo and Juliet,<br />

wrote a significant opera Philemon et Baucis.<br />

Hector Berlioz (1803-1869) created a monumental work with Les Troy ens,<br />

one of the most important masterpieces ever created on an ancient mythological<br />

subject. The work, which draws heavily upon Vergil, consists of two parts:<br />

La Prise de Troie (based upon Book 2 of the Aeneid) and Troyens à Carthage (the<br />

Dido and Aeneas episode from Book 4). Berlioz also wrote an affecting cantata,<br />

La Mort d'Orphée, for voice and orchestra.<br />

Arrigo Boito (1842-1918) wrote both the music and the libretto of his opera<br />

Mefistofele, after Goethe's Faust, in which Helen of Troy plays such a pivotal and<br />

symbolic role.<br />

Jules Massenet (1842-1912), especially beloved for his Manon and Werther,<br />

composed the opera Bacchus and Ariane.<br />

Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924), admired for his songs and chamber music, also<br />

wrote two mythological operas, Prométhée and Pénélope.<br />

Toward the end of the nineteenth century, the Russian composer Sergei<br />

Ivanovich Taneiev (1856-1915), a pupil of Tchaikovsky, completed his impressive<br />

Oresteia, based on Aeschylus.<br />

Zdenêk Fibich (1850-1899), a Czech romantic composer, created a monumental<br />

melodrama for the stage, the trilogy Hippodamia in three parts, The<br />

Courtship ofPelops, The Atonement of Tantalus, and Hippodamia s Death.<br />

Verismo opera, which became the rage at the turn of the century because of<br />

the genius of composers like Giacomo Puccini, turned away from classical<br />

themes in favor of the realistic and shocking or the Oriental and exotic; yet the<br />

realistic Ruggiero Leoncavallo (1858-1919), famous for his Pagliacci, also wrote<br />

an Edipo Rè (posthumously produced). This was in keeping with the trend in the<br />

twentieth century of returning to classical subjects.<br />

Thus, Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882-1973) used the Orpheus theme for a<br />

trilogy, L'Orfeide, and his Ecuba (1941) is modeled on Euripides.<br />

Max Bruch (1836-1920) has given us Odysseus, a vocal and choral masterpiece<br />

popular in Bruch's lifetime, which treats episodes from Homer.<br />

Among the operas of Darius Milhaud (1892-1974) are L'Orestie d'Eschyle, a trilogy<br />

comprising Agamemnon, Les Choéphores, and Les Euménides, composed to a translation<br />

by Paul Claudel; Les Malheurs d'Orphée; Médée; and three short operas (each<br />

only about ten minutes long): L'Enlèvement d'Europe, L'Abandon d'Ariane, and La<br />

Délivrance de Thésée. He also wrote an orchestral work, La Muse Ménagère, which<br />

also became a piano suite. He composed incidental music for Paul Claudel's satiric<br />

drama Protée, which told of the sad and hopeless love of the aged prophet Proteus<br />

for a young girl. The work was rescored as an orchestral symphonic suite, Protée.<br />

The Swiss composer Arthur Honegger (1892-1955) wrote an impressive<br />

opera, Antigone, set to a libretto by Jean Cocteau based upon Sophocles.

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