Gardening Sale!
 
 

Special Offers see all

Enter to WIN!

Weekly drawing for $100 credit. Subscribe to our Specials newsletter for a chance to win.
Privacy Policy

More at Powell's


Recently Viewed clear list


Original Essays | April 30, 2013

Rachel Roellke Coddington: IMG The Top Five Reasons You Should Love Monsters



Note: Rachel Roellke Coddington and Jolby will present their book at Powell's Books at Cedar Hills Crossing on Wednesday, May 15, at 7:00 p.m.... Continue »
  1. $11.89 Sale Hardcover add to wish list

spacer
Ships free on qualified orders.
$38.50
New Hardcover
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
available for shipping or prepaid pickup only
Available for In-store Pickup
in 7 to 12 days
Qty Store Section
1 Remote Warehouse Music- Opera

The Verdi-Boito Correspondence

by

The Verdi-Boito Correspondence Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

These 301 letters between Giuseppe Verdi and his last, most gifted librettist, Arrigo Boito, document an extraordinary chapter in musical history. Now available for the first time in English, this correspondence records both a unique friendship and its creative legacy.

This new edition of the landmark Carteggio Verdi/Boito is at once a valuable resource for all students, teachers, and scholars of opera and a fascinating glimpse of the daily life of European art and artists during the fertile last decades of the 19th century.

Embarking on a 20-year collaboration, Verdi and Boito produced a successful revision of Simon Boccanegra, and two new operas, Otello and Falstaff. They created what many consider to be Verdi's greatest operas, thanks both to Boito's poetry and to his handling of the composer. Here are the day-to-day tasks of creation: poet and composer debating problems of dramatic structure, words, phrases, and meters; altering dialogue as, at the same time, they converse about the wider worlds of art and music. The give and take of artistic creation is rendered fascinatingly.

This edition features a new introduction by Marcello Conati, improvements and updatings to the original edition, and an appendix of undated correspondence. William Weaver's translation is characteristically pitch-perfect; he also provides a short closing sketch of Boito's life after the death of his beloved maestro. Explanatory "linking texts" between the letters create a narrative.

Synopsis:

These 301 letters between Giuseppe Verdi and his last, most gifted librettist, Arrigo Boito, document an extraordinary chapter in musical history. Now available in a new English edition prepared by William Weaver, this correspondence records a unique friendship and its creative legacy with an arresting immediacy. This new edition of the landmark Carteggio Verdi-Boito is at once an essential source of information for all students, teachers, and scholars and a fascinating picture of the daily life of European art and artists during the crucial, fertile last decades of the 19th century. It is all set against the personal story of two very private figures - the aging maestro and the younger poet who became his close collaborator and trusted friend. Brought together after much maneuvering by the publisher Giulio Ricordi (brilliantly chronicled in Marcello Conati's new introduction to this volume), Verdi and Boito began working together in 1880 when the composer was 67 and, having given the world Aida and the Requiem believed his public career as a composer was over. Poet, critic, and librettist, Boito, then in his late 30s, was also a composer: his opera Mefistofele, initially a failure, had just been reworked and triumphantly revived. Embarking on a 20-year collaboration, the two produced a successful revision of Simon Boccanegra and what many consider to be Verdi's greatest operas, Otello and Falstaff, thanks both to Boito's poetry and to his tactful handling of the composer. Here are the day-to-day tasks of creation: poet and composer debating problems of dramatic structure, words, phrases, and meters; altering dialogue as, at the same time, they converse about the wider worlds of art andmusic. The give and take of artistic creation is rendered in brilliant and intimate detail. This edition features a new introduction by Marcello Conati, additions and updates to the original edition, and an appendix of key libretto passages in the original language. William Weaver's translation is characteristically pitch-perfect; he also provides a brief closing sketch of Boito's life after the death of his beloved maestro, and additional material for the English reader. Concise, explanatory linking texts between the letters create a dramatic, flowing narrative.

Table of Contents

Preface by William Weaver

Introduction by Marcello Conati

Letters

Appendix

Index

Product Details

ISBN:
9780226853048
Editor:
Conati, Marcello; Medici, Mario
Editor:
Medici, Mario
Editor:
Conati, Marcello
Editor:
Conati, Marcello; Medici, Mario
Author:
Conati, Marcello
Author:
Verdi, Giuseppe
Author:
Medici, Mario
Author:
Boito, Arrigo
Translator:
Weaver, William
Publisher:
University of Chicago Press
Location:
Chicago :
Subject:
Composers & Musicians - Classical Vocalists
Subject:
Composers
Subject:
Opera
Subject:
Verdi, Giuseppe
Subject:
Boito, Arrigo
Subject:
Librettists
Subject:
Opera -- Italy -- 19th century.
Subject:
Librettists -- Italy -- Correspondence.
Subject:
Genres & Styles - Opera
Subject:
Verdi, Giuseppe - Correspondence
Subject:
Composers -- Italy -- Correspondence.
Subject:
Music | Opera
Edition Description:
1
Series Volume:
69
Publication Date:
19940731
Binding:
HARDCOVER
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Illustrations:
14 halftones, music examples throughout,
Pages:
386
Dimensions:
9.31x6.38x1.37 in. 2.04 lbs.

Other books you might like

  1. George Gershwin: His Life and Work New Hardcover $62.75
  2. The Letters of Arturo Toscanini Used Hardcover $7.95
  3. Magic Flutes & Enchanted Forests:... New Hardcover $55.00
  4. Verdi's Middle Period: Source... New Trade Paper $74.25

Related Subjects

Arts and Entertainment » Music » Genres and Styles » Opera

The Verdi-Boito Correspondence New Hardcover
0 stars - 0 reviews
$38.50 In Stock
Product details 386 pages University of Chicago Press - English 9780226853048 Reviews:
"Synopsis" by , These 301 letters between Giuseppe Verdi and his last, most gifted librettist, Arrigo Boito, document an extraordinary chapter in musical history. Now available in a new English edition prepared by William Weaver, this correspondence records a unique friendship and its creative legacy with an arresting immediacy. This new edition of the landmark Carteggio Verdi-Boito is at once an essential source of information for all students, teachers, and scholars and a fascinating picture of the daily life of European art and artists during the crucial, fertile last decades of the 19th century. It is all set against the personal story of two very private figures - the aging maestro and the younger poet who became his close collaborator and trusted friend. Brought together after much maneuvering by the publisher Giulio Ricordi (brilliantly chronicled in Marcello Conati's new introduction to this volume), Verdi and Boito began working together in 1880 when the composer was 67 and, having given the world Aida and the Requiem believed his public career as a composer was over. Poet, critic, and librettist, Boito, then in his late 30s, was also a composer: his opera Mefistofele, initially a failure, had just been reworked and triumphantly revived. Embarking on a 20-year collaboration, the two produced a successful revision of Simon Boccanegra and what many consider to be Verdi's greatest operas, Otello and Falstaff, thanks both to Boito's poetry and to his tactful handling of the composer. Here are the day-to-day tasks of creation: poet and composer debating problems of dramatic structure, words, phrases, and meters; altering dialogue as, at the same time, they converse about the wider worlds of art andmusic. The give and take of artistic creation is rendered in brilliant and intimate detail. This edition features a new introduction by Marcello Conati, additions and updates to the original edition, and an appendix of key libretto passages in the original language. William Weaver's translation is characteristically pitch-perfect; he also provides a brief closing sketch of Boito's life after the death of his beloved maestro, and additional material for the English reader. Concise, explanatory linking texts between the letters create a dramatic, flowing narrative.
spacer
spacer
  • back to top
Follow us on...




Powell's City of Books is an independent bookstore in Portland, Oregon, that fills a whole city block with more than a million new, used, and out of print books. Shop those shelves — plus literally millions more books, DVDs, and eBooks — here at Powells.com.