THE EVOLUTION AND MULTICULTURALITY OF THE OPERETTA GENRE

Authors

  • Renata VARI PhD student, Transilvania University of Braşov, Faculty of Music, orshi7@yahoo.com
  • Stela DRĂGULIN Professor PhD, Transilvania University of Brașov, Faculty of Music, dragulin@unitbv.ro https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4814-1705

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24193/subbmusica.2020.2.09

Keywords:

operetta, multiculturalism, universal language, interdisciplinarity, art.

Abstract

This article present how the musical genre of operetta has evolved from one time period to another, how it has been influenced by the tradition and the folklore of each country, and the kind of imprints it left on the culture that approached it. Starting from the fact that music is the universal language that includes ethnicities, nationalities, and geographical divisions, it is the one that brings together people from all backgrounds and it unites them in appreciation, participation, and education. The advantages derived from the approach of multicultural music education can be illustrated through all these elements - a much wider and interesting openness.

References

Bălan, George. Muzica şi lumea ideilor (Music and the World of Ideas). Ed. Muzicală a Uniunii Compozitorilor, Bucharest,1973.

Botstein, Leon. The National Cosmopolitan and the Jewish. The Musical Quarterly, Volume 97, Oxford university Press, 2014.

Bourriaud, Nicolas. translated James Gussen și Lili Porten. The Radicant. Lukas and Sternberg Press, New York, 2009.

Bughici, Dumitru. Dicționar de forme şi genuri muzicale (Dictionary of musical forms and genres). Ed. Muzicală, Bucharest,1978;

Crittenden, Camille. Johann Strauss and Vienna: Operetta and the Politics of Popular Culture. Cambridge, GB: Cambridge University Press, 2000.

Firca, Gheorghe. Vodevilul și opereta clasică universală (Voudeville and universal classical operetta). Ed. Universitatea Muncitorească de Cultură Muzicală, Bucharest, 1963.

Gál, György Sandor. Operettek Kőnyve (The book of Operettas). Zeneműkiadó Vállalat, Budapest, 1960.

Grun, Bernard, Princess of Vienna: The life of Oscar Strauss. W.H. Allen, London, 1955.

Heltai, György. Az operett metamorfózisai 1945-1956 (Operetta Metamorphoses). Elte Eötvös Kiadó, Budapest, 2012.

Ignatius Letellier, Robert. Operetta - A sourcebook, vol 1. Cambrige Scholars Publishing, 2015.

Lamb, Andrew. Light Music from Austria: Reminiscences and writings of Max Schönher. Peter Lang, New York, 1992.

Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels. The Manifesto oft he Communist Party. Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing group INC., New York, 1992.

Moisescu, Titus and Miltiade Păun. Ghid de operetă (Operetta Guide). Ed. Muzicală a Uniunii Compozitorilor din România, București, 1969.

Moritz, Csaky. Ideologia operetei și modernitatea vieneză (Operetta ideology and venetian modernity) Ed. Universității “Alexandru Ioan Cuza”, Iași, 2013.

Sterling-Mackinlay, Malcom. Origin and Development of Light Opera. Hutchinson and Company Limited, 1927.

Turner, Victor. The Anthropology of Performance. PAJ Publications, New York, 1988.

ARTICLES:

Hao, H. Educators Jurnal, Music apreciation class. (84),2, 29-34, 1997.

Skelton, K. Should we study music and /or culture?. Music Education Research, (6)2, 169-177, 2004.

Stokes, Martin. On musical Cosmopolitanism. The Macalester International Roundtable, 2007.

WEB SOURCES:

https://ro.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opereta(Operetta).

Lamb, Andrew (2001) Operetta. https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.

Downloads

Published

2020-12-21

How to Cite

VARI, R., & DRĂGULIN, S. (2020). THE EVOLUTION AND MULTICULTURALITY OF THE OPERETTA GENRE. Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Musica, 65(2), 119–128. https://doi.org/10.24193/subbmusica.2020.2.09

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)