LE JONGLEUR DE NOTRE DAME

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dulcinea
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LE JONGLEUR DE NOTRE DAME

Post by dulcinea » Tue Jan 23, 2007 11:09 am

The OPERA article of THE WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA of 1964 had a list of the 50 most popular operas (not very comprehensive; except for Mozart and Puccini, every opera in that list was from the 19th century). One of those operas was THE JUGGLER OF OUR LADY; its plot intrigued me, and for more than forty years I have been on the lookout for a performance of it. Apparently it is no longer one of the 50 most popular operas, because in more than forty years I have not heard even one note of it. Has anybody here heard this very obscure rarity? Would you recommend it?
Let every thing that has breath praise the Lord! Alleluya!

PJME
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Post by PJME » Tue Jan 23, 2007 12:26 pm

Image

This version of Massenet's opera ( a "Miracle en 3 actes") is propably the most recent one.

http://www.jules-massenet.com/a_jong.htm

Peter Maxwell Davies based his (little 1978) opera on the same Medieval legend.

I don't know this work however - apparently Massenet thought very well of it himself.
I'm sure there's a Massenet specialist out there!

karlhenning
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Post by karlhenning » Tue Jan 23, 2007 12:28 pm

Time has not been kind to Massenet, and I expect that is not quite fair.
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Corlyss_D
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Re: LE JONGLEUR DE NOTRE DAME

Post by Corlyss_D » Tue Jan 23, 2007 12:31 pm

dulcinea wrote:The OPERA article of THE WORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA of 1964 had a list of the 50 most popular operas (not very comprehensive; except for Mozart and Puccini, every opera in that list was from the 19th century). One of those operas was THE JUGGLER OF OUR LADY; its plot intrigued me, and for more than forty years I have been on the lookout for a performance of it. Apparently it is no longer one of the 50 most popular operas, because in more than forty years I have not heard even one note of it. Has anybody here heard this very obscure rarity? Would you recommend it?
If Massenet scribbled his grocery list on a gum wrapper, I'd recommend it. The man's melodic gifts and his insight into the psychology of characters was flawless.
Corlyss
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Corlyss_D
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Post by Corlyss_D » Tue Jan 23, 2007 12:32 pm

PJME wrote:I'm sure there's a Massenet specialist out there!
I would be willing to stand my creds up against anyone's here. I used to belong to the Massenet Society (English division).
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dulcinea
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Post by dulcinea » Sun Feb 18, 2007 10:55 pm

According to Wikipedia, this opera was popular only as long as Mary Garden sang the title role, and when that was no longer the case, it vanished from the stage. Therefore, the author of that WBE list, who put THE JUGGLER on the same level of popularity as CARMEN, LA BOHEME and LA TRAVIATA, was in fact indulging in a bit of deceitful puffery. Who was he kidding??? :roll:
Let every thing that has breath praise the Lord! Alleluya!

piston
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Post by piston » Sun Feb 18, 2007 11:01 pm

Mary Garden, "a relentless self-publicist," (Wikipedia). She lived a long life. Anybody willing to offer "insider" info?
In the eyes of those lovers of perfection, a work is never finished—a word that for them has no sense—but abandoned....(Paul Valéry)

Corlyss_D
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Post by Corlyss_D » Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:00 pm

dulcinea wrote:According to Wikipedia, this opera was popular only as long as Mary Garden sang the title role, and when that was no longer the case, it vanished from the stage. Therefore, the author of that WBE list, who put THE JUGGLER on the same level of popularity as CARMEN, LA BOHEME and LA TRAVIATA, was in fact indulging in a bit of deceitful puffery. Who was he kidding??? :roll:
Well, it could be. Would you care to guess which Mozart opera was the most popular until c. 1840?
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piston
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Post by piston » Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:33 pm

La clemanza di Tito (Metastasio), written for the coronation of Leopold II, King of Bohemia, 1791. Ooops, the question was intended for somebody else.
In the eyes of those lovers of perfection, a work is never finished—a word that for them has no sense—but abandoned....(Paul Valéry)

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