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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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714 THE SURVIVAL OF CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY<br />

Thomas Mann, also treats the idea of beauty through important archetypal images.<br />

This story about a famous writer, Aschenbach, who becomes enamored of<br />

the beautiful boy Tadzio, is framed in terms of concepts of love and beauty that<br />

are familiar from Plato's Symposium; the structure is also mythological because<br />

of the Nietzschean conflict between a restrained Apollo and a passionate Dionysus<br />

for the soul of the creative artist. Interwoven as well are the allegorical themes<br />

of disease, plague, and death, which go as far back as the Iliad and gain a specially<br />

potent classic expression in Sophocles' Oedipus. Also among Britten's last<br />

compositions is Phaedra (1975), a cantata to a text from Racine's play (in a verse<br />

translation by Robert Lowell), written expressly for the mezzo-soprano Janet Baker.<br />

William Walton (1902-1983) wrote a striking operatic version of an episode<br />

in the Trojan War, Troilus and Cressida, based upon the medieval romance.<br />

Arthur Bliss (1891-1975) turned to Greek themes with his cantata, Hymn to<br />

Apollo; an opera, The Olympians; and a symphony for orator, chorus, and orchestra<br />

entitled Morning Heroes—the latter written as a tribute to his brother and<br />

his comrades who died in the Great War of 1914-1918; among the texts used are<br />

Hector's Farewell to Andromache (Iliad 6) and Achilles Goes Forth to Battle<br />

[Iliad 19).<br />

Michael Tippett (1905-1998) wrote both the text and the music for an imaginative<br />

operatic treatment of the Trojan War (largely inspired by the Iliad), King<br />

Priam. From this work, he extracted one of Achilles' songs (with guitar accompaniment)<br />

and added two others, all focusing upon the relationship between<br />

Achilles and Patroclus, to create an effectively terse and tragic cycle, Songs for<br />

Achilles ("In the Tent," "Across the Plain," and "By the Sea").<br />

Harrison Birtwistle (b. 1934) provided (to accompany a text by Peter<br />

Zinovieff) a lament upon the sorrow and death of Orpheus for soprano soloist,<br />

Nenia, the Death of Orpheus, which relies upon striking gymnastic effects both instrumental<br />

and vocal. Nenia is a funeral dirge or the Roman goddess thereof.<br />

Birtwistle and Zinovieff have since expanded this work into a larger-scaled operatic<br />

composition of note, The Mask of Orpheus.<br />

Operetta and Musical Comedy. Other musical genres have inevitably been influenced<br />

by classical mythology and legend. The boisterous, satiric, and melodic<br />

works of Jacques Offenbach (1819-1880) provide splendid introductions to the<br />

world of light opera and operetta. His opera bouffe Orphée aux Enfers (Orpheus<br />

in the Underworld) is an absolute delight; surely everyone has heard from this<br />

score some version of the can-can, which Offenbach immortalized. Equally witty<br />

and entertaining is his later La Belle Hélène (The Beautiful Helen). Amid its tuneful<br />

arias is the famous "Judgment of Paris."<br />

Another charming operetta is by Franz von Suppé (1819-1895), Die Schbne<br />

Galathée (The Beautiful Galatea). In this musical treatment of the story of<br />

Pygmalion, the sculptor despairs of the woman whom he has brought to life;<br />

she is so flirtatious and troublesome that, to his relief, Venus grants his request

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