Subj : What is an opera? To : Ardith Hinton From : alexander koryagin Date : Tue Apr 17 2018 20:33:11 Hi, Ardith Hinton! I read your message from 16.04.2018 16:20 about What is an opera?. ak>> What is an opera? ak>> The correct answer: tI si a dnik fo tra erehw elpoep gnis sgnos ak>> retfa gnieb debbats ot htaed. [It is a kind of art where people sing songs after being stabbed to death] AH> Heh. While I'm not a great fan of opera, it wouldn't surprise me if AH> they did. ISTR that in one of Shakespeare's tragedies... HAMLET or AH> MACBETH?... various people are mortally wounded & go on for quite AH> some time saying "Oh, oh, I'm dying!" In the English tradition AH> there are very few operas. Shakespeare's plays had some musical AH> accompaniment. We probably should separate a classical opera from a theater performance. In opera they sing everything, usually in classical way (like did Luciano Pavarotti). For instance, in Russia there was even an opera about WW2, where our pilot had been shot down and crashed into a deep forest, in winter. He sang his words, but the most funny thing was that a bear who wanted to eat him also sang his part. ;-) AH> More recently we've added plays in which (e.g.) John Wensleydale AH> says "I'm going to the bakery to fetch a loaf of bread" and then AH> bursts into song about how much he loves both the smell of fresh AH> bread & the baker's daughter, who works behind the counter. It is probably a new, Broadway style opera. AH> But the Italian language sounds so musical already that it seems AH> natural for Giovanni Mascarpone to sing "I'm going to the bakery" AH> etc. Different language <-> different style.... ;-) Was it an Italian opera? Bye, Ardith! Alexander Koryagin ENGLISH_TUTOR 2018 --- Paul's Win98SE VirtualBox * Origin: Quinn's Post - Maryborough, Queensland, OZ (3:640/384) .