- Select a new quote attributed to a different individual than any of those currently quoted below.
- Add a new Quote to the next available subpage, using the layout format from the link above.
- Add a citation of where the quote was stated on that subpage below the quote.
- Update the "Random subpage" start and end values at the Main Portal page to include the new Quote.
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/1
Massenet feels the story as a Frenchman, with the powder and the minuets. I shall feel it as an Italian, with desperate passion.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/2
I adore art... when I am alone with my notes, my heart pounds and the tears stream from my eyes, and my emotion and my joys are too much to bear.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/3
No good opera plot can be sensible, for people do not sing when they are feeling sensible.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/4
Monsieur Wagner has good moments, but awful quarters of an hour!
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/5
Rossini, in music, is the genius of sheer animal spirits. It is a species as inferior to that of Mozart, as the cleverness of a smart boy is to that of a man of sentiment; but it is genius nevertheless.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/6
I deny that either singers or conductors can "create" or work creatively – this, as I have always said, is a conception that leads to the abyss.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/7
There are three degrees of comparison: stupido, stupidissimo, and tenore.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/8
Oh, I hate the thought of all those costumes and grease paint! When I think that characters like Kundry will now have to be dressed up, those dreadful artists' balls immediately spring into my mind. Having created the invisible orchestra, I now feel like inventing the invisible theatre!
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/9
I love my coloratura music, and I think my audience likes it too; it goes to the heart—it is all melody, and that is what people like.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/10
I can think of but two people who honestly can be said to possess vocal mastery: they are Caruso and John McCormack. Those who have only heard the latter do little Irish tunes, have no idea of what he is capable. I have heard him sing Mozart as no one else I know of can.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/11
The combination of fine singing and fine acting is rare. Nowadays people think if they can act, that atones for inartistic singing; then they yield to the temptation to shout, to make harsh tones, simply for effect.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/12
The old Italian composers knew well how to write for the voice. Their music has beauty, it has melody, and melodic beauty will always make its appeal. And the older Italian music is built up not only of melody and fioriture, but is also dramatic. For these qualities can combine, and do so in the last act of Traviata, which is so full of deep feeling and pathos.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/13
Of the great modern Italian composers, I feel that Puccini is the most important, because he has a more intimate appreciation of theatrical values. He seems to know just what kind of music will fit a series of words or a scene, which will best bring out the dramatic sense.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/14
It is possible to learn more of the world by producing a single opera, or even conducting a single orchestral rehearsal, than by ten years reading in the Library of the British Museum.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/15
The audience is requested not to refrain from talking during the overture. Otherwise they will know all the tunes before the opera begins.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/16
You have taken far too much trouble over your opera. Here in England that is mere waste of time. What the English like is something that they can beat time to, something that hits them straight on the drum of the ear.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/17
I wouldn't mind seeing opera die. Ever since I was a boy, I regarded opera as a ponderous anachronism, almost the equivalent of smoking.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/18
I love Italian opera — it’s so reckless. Damn Richard Wagner, and his bellowings at Fate and death. Damn Debussy, and his averted face. I like the Italians who run all on impulse, and don’t care about their immortal souls, and don’t worry about the ultimate.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/19
If an opera cannot be played by an organ-grinder — as Puccini and Verdi's melodies were played — then that opera is not going to achieve immortality.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/20
Porgy is…an interesting example of what can be done by talent in spite of a bad setup. With a libretto that should never have been accepted on a subject that should never have been chosen, a man who should never have attempted it has written a work that has a considerable power.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/21
I wish to sing of my interior visions with the naïve candour of a child. No doubt, this simple musical grammar will jar on some people. It is bound to offend the partisans of deceit and artifice. I foresee that and rejoice at it.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/22
Every Englishman believes that Handel now occupies an important position in heaven. If so, le bon Dieu must feel toward him very much as Louis Treize felt toward Richelieu.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/23
Callas? She was pure electricity.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/24
I once said that the most elegant solution of the problem of opera was to blow up the opera houses, and I still think this true . Opera is the area before all others in which things have stood still.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/25
My heyday is over, and another must take my place. The world wants something new. Others have ceded their places to us and we must cede ours to still others... I am more than happy to give mine to people of talent like Verdi.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/26
There are three kinds of music: the good, the bad, and that of Ambroise Thomas.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/27
I sincerely believe that nothing will make better citizenship than familiarity with grand opera. It lifts one so out of the sordid affairs of life and makes material things seem so petty, so inconsequential, that it places one for the time being, at least, in a higher and better world.
|
Portal:Opera/Selected quote/28
People are wrong when they say that the opera isn't what it used to be. It is what it used to be—that's what's wrong with it!
|
New quotes may be nominated on Portal talk:Opera/Selected quote.