
HarvardX: 19th-Century Opera: Meyerbeer, Wagner, & Verdi
Learn the music and cultural impact of three canonical operas from the 1800s: Les Huguenots , Das Rheingold , and Otello.
Learning Journey Context
This course serves as an entry point into Art & Culture, building foundational knowledge before moving on to advanced frameworks or specialized paths.
Relevant for professionals pursuing roles within Art & Culture.
Quick Facts
What Youâll Learn
Travel through central Europe in the 1800s to experience the premieres of Meyerbeerâs Les Huguenots , Wagnerâs Das Rheingold , and Verdiâs Otello. A complement to our course on 18th-century opera, youâll be introduced to opera through an in-depth study of these canonical works. Youâll learn about the musical details of each opera and the cultural influence of the works by understanding the circumstances of its composition, premiere performance, and its legacy and significance today.
First, step inside the Paris OpĂ©ra in 1836 for the premiere performance of Giacomo Meyerbeerâs grand opera Les Huguenots. Go behind the scenes to discover the people and technology that made this type of opera such a thrilling combination of music and spectacle, important in its time but little-known today. Youâll learn about the characteristics of opera from this period, those involved in producing the premiere, and the social context surrounding Les Huguenots.
Then, journey to Bayreuth in 1876 for the first production of Richard Wagnerâs Das Rheingold , the opening opera of his four-part saga Der Ring des Nibelungen. Discover how Wagner used musical themes to tell this mythical story and learn about the advancements in stage technology that brought this work to life.
Finally, travel to Milan in 1887 for the premiere of Giuseppe Verdiâs second-to-last opera, Otello. Learn how Verdiâs musical approach to this Shakespearean tragedy, his first opera after a fifteen-year hiatus, was influenced by the operatic innovations of his contemporary, Richard Wagner.
Enroll now to get to know the music of these three amazing operas, the 19th-century cultural context in which they were performed, and how they remain relevant in todayâs complex musical landscape.
Outcomes
- The technologies behind 1830s French opera performances.
- The relationships among major players in the premiere of Les Huguenots.
- How Romanticism differed from the optimism of the Enlightenment.
- The different singing styles in French Grand Opera.
- Innovations in staging between the three periods of opera..
- How Wagner represented characters and situations with musical themes.
- How Wagnerâs approach to opera influenced Verdiâs Otello.
- How Act I of Otello looked and sounded at the premiere.
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