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Date: | Sat, 21 Dec 2002 17:03:38 -0500 |
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In the 12/15 NYTimes Book Review, Gary Tomlinson took on the topic of
critical distain of popular composers, using Puccini as the example.
The whole article is worth reading, but the point of this post is one
set of Tomlinson's assertions:
"And to my hearing, the best single act Puccini ever wrote is
the first of 'La Fanciulla del West': emotionally coherent, well
paced, successfully joining varied musical materials, skillfully
deploying whole-tone harmonies to capture the vast terrain of
California and the emotional quest of its inhabitants, all the
while not forsaking intimate sentimentality. If the impact today
of this work is contaminated with the fallout of decades of
Hollywood westerns--it cannot help but seem to us the first
spaghetti western, and it is hard to know what the half-life of
such contamination might be--this is not Puccini's problem but
ours."
I can't agree. The climax of the act comes nowhere near that of several
others of Puccini, e.g., the first act of Tosca. And the miners sobbing
for their mommas, fine as the music is, is too maudlin for the setting.
It's a hard choice, but I wonder what other Listers consider the single
greatest act Puccini ever wrote. My wife goes for Act 1 of Butterfly;
I still go for Act 2 Boheme.
Jeff Dunn
[log in to unmask]
Alameda, CA
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