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Musical drama   /mjˈuzɪkəl drˈɑmə/   Listen
Musical drama

noun
1.
Opera in which the musical and dramatic elements are equally important; the music is appropriate to the action.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Musical drama" Quotes from Famous Books



... with flowers, appears a woman of unearthly loveliness. It is Kundry transformed, and in the marvelous duet which follows between her and Parsifal, a perfectly new and original type of love duet is struck out—an analysis of character, unique in musical drama—a combination of sentiment and a situation absolutely novel, which could only have been conceived and carried out by a creative genius of ...
— Parsifal - Story and Analysis of Wagner's Great Opera • H. R. Haweis

... of St. Paul,' performed at Rome, 1440, as described by Sulpicius, has been erroneously called the first opera, or musical drama. 'Abram et Isaac suo Figliuolo,' a sacred drama (azione sacra), 'showing how Abraham was commanded by God to sacrifice his son Isaac on the mountain,' was performed in the Church of St. Mary Magdalen in Florence, 1449. Another on the same subject, called 'Abraham ...
— The Standard Oratorios - Their Stories, Their Music, And Their Composers • George P. Upton

... Hanover with Lord Halifax: and the year after he was made Under Secretary of State, first to Sir Charles Hedges, and in a few months more to the Earl of Sunderland. About this time the prevalent taste for Italian operas inclined him to try what would be the effect of a musical drama in our own language. He therefore wrote the opera of Rosamond, which, when exhibited on the stage, was either hissed or neglected; but, trusting that the readers would do him more justice, he published it with an inscription to the Duchess ...
— Lives of the Poets: Addison, Savage, and Swift • Samuel Johnson

... remarkable clearness, and the music invests them with a sense and distinctness of convincing force as an inseparable whole, such as had not been previously known in opera. It may be said that with the "Flying Dutchman" a new operatic era began, or rather the attainment of its dimly conceived destiny as a musical drama. It also expresses the mental activity of the time and the longing for a new world, which was to redeem mankind and secure for us an existence worthy of ourselves. It still appears to us as the native land, encircling us with its ...
— Life of Wagner - Biographies of Musicians • Louis Nohl



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