SYLLABUS FOR MUS 103, INTRODUCTION TO ITALIAN OPERA

Fall  SEMESTER 2005, Prof. L. Peterson, Office: AED 319, 831-8134

peterson@udel.edu or http://amy.music.udel.edu/faculty/peterson/

 

 

GOALS

1) Explore the genre of Italian opera

2) Develop a vocabulary and skills to communicate about opera.

3) Experience an opera in a live performance setting.

4) Understand Verismo, Opera Seria and Opera buffa

 

TEXTS

1) J. M. Knapp, The Magic of Opera, (K plus chapter or page numbers below) 

2)  H. W. Simon,  100 Great Operas;  

3) L. W. Peterson, Reading and Discussion Materials to accompany Introduction to Opera: I and II  (indicated as booklet below)

(This has the discussion questions for each class period plus terms that you need to know for exams, a sample exam, information about the final exam, a guide to the use of the multimedia lessons, the Powerpoint slides for the final lecture, articles to read, and Prof. Peterson’s notes for each opera.)

4) L. W. Peterson,  La Boheme (online via WebCT link). 

5) Megan Jenkins,  Otello  (online via WebCT link).

6) Emily Wimberley, Le Nozze di Figaro (online via WebCT link). 

.7) 2 CD SETS: A) Night At the Opera (Erato 39842 64992), B) The #1 Opera Album (Decca 289 457 632-2).  At the UD bookstore you must request these CDs at the desk because CD’s are not put on the textbook shelves.  You probably can order these 2 CD sets online at Amazon.com or elsewhere.

 

RULES and POLICIES

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1. ATTENDANCE IS MANDATORY FOR THIS COURSE, WHICH INCLUDES ALL CLASS PERIODS.  Your course grade is lowered if there is more than 2 unexcused absences.  Informing the instructor that you will miss a particular class does not automatically assure approval to be absent.  Each absence, after the second one, lowers your course grade 5 points.  This policy includes the Wednesday before Thanksgiving so you need to plan ahead for days that you will miss.  Each semester some students have their course grade lowered because of too many absences.  There are no extra-credit options to remove absences.  Excused absences for illness and interviews do not impact your grade.

 

2.  You are required to attend a live performance of an opera during this semester, which will require payment.  To fulfill this requirement, you may attend any opera in full production.  This semester Rigoletto by Verdi will be produced by Opera Delaware at the Grand Opera House in Wilmington on Oct 29, Nov 3, 5, and 6. You have to provide your own transportation. Cost of the ticket is $10 for students.  You are welcome to bring friends with you but they must be a student since these are group student rates.  Tickets to OperaDelaware performances sell out very quickly so it is imperative that you arrange for your tickets immediately.  Prof. Peterson will arrange for the tickets if you get the request form to him by 19 September.

 

  You are welcome to attend opera performances in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington DC or New York.  Check my home page (see url above).  In the left (green) margin area—click on “opera links” and you can see the schedules of the various opera houses between New York City and Washington DC.  Performances by the UD opera workshop cannot be used to fulfill this course requirement.  YOU MUST SUBMIT A TYPED REPORT FOR THE LIVE OPERA PERFORMANCE DURING THE WEEK THAT COMES IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE PERFORMANCE YOU ATTENDED.  FAILURE TO DO SO MAY CAUSE YOUR COURSE GRADE TO BE LOWERED ONE LETTER GRADE.  In your review do not tell me the story of the opera but rather indicate your reactions to the performance: the singers, the acting, the lighting, the orchestra, the diction.  This report is not graded. 

 

3. Please be prompt to class.  If you are often tardy, your course grade may be lowered.  Regarding your behavior in class, we replicate the atmosphere within an opera house so there should be no talking during the viewing of an opera so that you do not disturb others.  Although we all value personal and academic freedom, we have the responsibility to promote an atmosphere of civility in which the free exchange of ideas and opinions can flourish and in the case of this opera class, the atmosphere includes not disturbing others when a quiet atmosphere is expected.

 

4. Exams will not be made up unless approved in advance.  If approved, it must be made up before the next class meeting after the exam if possible.  All exams have required listening examples.  See the Listening List towards the end of the syllabus.  The Final Exam will be ____ December at _____________. in AED 207.  In the Lecture Notes booklet--page 19--you will find what to expect on the final exam with some modifications noted at the end of the syllabus. 

 

5. Course grades will be determined as follows:  Each of  the 4 exams—the final exam is the 4th--count as 25 %.  Your course grade may be lowered for any of the following: 1) tardiness to class, 2) failure to participate satisfactorily in discussions, 3) failure to attend a live opera, 4) failure to submit a typed reviews of the opera  you viewed live, or 5)  too many absences from class.

Letter grades are awarded as follows: A (91-100)   A- (90)   B+ (89)   B (81-88)   B- (80)   C+   (79)   C (71-78)   C- (79)   D+ (69)   D (66-68…note the short span)   D- (65)   F (0-64)

 

Class, it is too late to contact me after the final exam to express concern about your course grade.  I do not provide extra credit opportunitites to improve your grade.  Nor will I change my mind about the number of unexcused absences.  You receive the course grade that you earn.  A syllabus is a legal contract.  The policies herein are final.

 

6. Before we begin each opera unit you need to read before the first class the story of the opera in the Simon text.  Via email, class members will be assigned questions to be answered also via email for each opera/unit we study.  Your answers need to be sent to Prof. Peterson in a timely matter so that he can quickly prepare a master list of answers to send the whole class towards the beginning of our study of each opera.  You need to check your email daily for the assigned questions and the responses for each unit to appreciate fully what you are viewing in class.  For Otello, La Boheme, and Le Nozze di Figaro you will have multimedia lessons that you need to explore early in our study of these operas.  The Le Nozze lesson is the only one without any video or audio examples embedded within it.  You will see those examples in class.  With the other multimedia lessons—Vocal Timbre I, Ensembles/Embellishment, Otello, and La Boheme—you will have both video and audio examples.  Any of these examples may appear on the listening portions of the exams.

 

The assigned questions will be the major source of written questions on the exams.  So check your email.   Discussion items with (ALL) beside them indicate topics that all groups should be ready to discuss them.  If you know the answers to the discussion items, you will be prepared for the exams.  Your group should be prepared to indicate where you found the answer (page number and citation in Knapp, Simon, multimedia lesson, or Lecture Notes booklet).  If a question is assigned to PETERSON then Prof. Peterson will answer this question. 

 

7. Even though his office hours are limited, Prof. Peterson does wish to interact with you.  Please feel free to contact him by phone or e-mail to ask questions or set a time for an appointment.  Also, please feel free to ask questions in class, after class, or via e-mail.  Please don’t ask questions BEFORE class because that time is needed to set up the projection equipment and laserdisc/CD-ROM/DVD players.

 

8. All students must be honest and forthright in their academic studies.  To falsify the results of ones research, to steal the words or ideas of another, to cheat on an assignment, or to allow or assist another to commit these acts corrupts the educational process. Students are expected to do their own work and neither give nor receive unauthorized assistance. Any violation of this standard must be reported to the Office of Judicial Affairs:

(http://www.udel.edu/stuguide/03-04/code.html#hones

 

MEETINGS and ASSIGNMENTS

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UNIT 1:  OVERVIEW OF OPERA

 

31 Aug; 2 & 5 Sept. Opera conventions and terms; vocal timbre categories; presentation of examples of embellishment..  Read:  booklet UNIT 1 for terms and discussion topics and K 1, 2, 6.  Before 7 September, read Simon's story of La Traviata (The Wandering One).  Check email for question assignments and for correct answers for them.

 

UNIT 2:  VERDI'S LA TRAVIATA

 

7, 9, 12, 14, 16, 19 Sept Verdi's La Traviata. (discussion topics in BOOKLET pp. 10-12) K 4 and 5  See Listening list below for 2 exceprts in your CD Set.

You must have your check/cash turned in by 19 September if Prof. Peterson is to get your OperaDelaware tickets.  Check email for question assignments and for correct answers for them.  For Listening on Exam I that is related to Verdi, see Listening List at the end of the syllabus.  Before 21 September,  read Simon's story for  Verdi’s Otello and the course booklet, pp. 167-204 plus K 3 and 11 and complete the multimedia lesson in AED 109 or within WebCT for Otello.

 

UNIT 3:  VERDI'S OTELLO

 

21, 23, 26, 28, 30 Sept and 3 Oct. Verdi's Otello.  Read booklet pp. 169-203 plus K 3 and 11. Check email for question assignments and for correct answers for them.  For Listening on Exam I that is related to Verdi, see Listening List at the end of the syllabus

 

27 Sept   EXAM I.  (See Listening List below.  Before next class read in booklet and Simon about La Boheme and please complete the multimedia lesson in AED 109 or on WebCT on La Boheme as soon as possible.

 

UNIT 4:  PUCCINI'S LA BOHEME

 

7, 10, 12, 14, 17 Oct.  Puccini's La Boheme.  Read  booklet, pp. 59-68.  K 7, 8, and 15.  Check email for question assignments and for correct answers for them.  For Listening on Exam II that is related to Puccini, see Listening List below.

 

9 Oct. EXAM II. (See Listening List below. Before next class, read Simon's story of Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro.)

 

UNIT 5:  MOZART'S THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO

 

21, 24, 26 Oct  and after Fall Break 31Oct, 2, 4, 7, 9 Nov.  Le Nozze di Figaro (Booklet, pp. 135-158) (Also read Paul Robinson article, pp. 23-47), Knapp, chapter 10. Check email for question assignments and for correct answers for them.  For Listening on Exam III that is related to Mozart see Listening List at the end of syllabus.  You will need to compare the 5 different productions that you view in class: 1) Ponnelle movie, 2) Glyndebourne, 3) Berlin, 4) Paris, and 5) Drotningholm. Before 11 November, read: Simon's story of Rossini's The Barber of Seville and booklet, pp. 49-58 and re-read Paul Robinson’s article  pp. 23-47.

 

28 Oct.  Fall Break, no class 

 

UNIT 6: ROSSINI'S THE BARBER OF SEVILLE

 

11, 14, 16, 18, 21, 23 Nov. Rossini's Il barbière di Siviglia  Re-read the Paul Robinson article, pp. 21-48), booklet pp. 49-58 as well as Knapp, chapter 11.  Check email for assignments and answers for them.  For Listening on Exam III that is related to Rossini, see Listening List at end of syllabus

 

25 Nov  Thanksgiving Recess

 

UNIT 7: WHAT IS OPERA?

 

28 Nov Bring booklet to class!!  Powerpoint slides in booklet, 307-312.

We will start this topic but interrupt it next class for Exam III.  The Exam was scheduled on Wednesday so that you did not have to return from Thanksgiving Break and immediately take an exam.

 

30 Nov. EXAM III.  Covers both Mozart and Rossini operas.  See Listening List below.

 

2, 5 Dec.  What is Opera? ….

 

7 Dec. Review for Final Exam

 

Dec _______________.   FINAL EXAM

 

In Spring 2006, the other opera course--Music 104--will be offered.  In Music 104 Introduction to Italian, French, and German Opera we study a variety of opera styles:  opera comique and grand opera (French),  singspiel, operetta, and music drama (German), and the following Italian styles: baroque opera seria, opera giacosa, and two verismo operas.  The specific operas that we usually study are Leoncavallo's I Pagliacci,  Mozart's Don Giovanni; Mozart's Die Zauberflöte; Puccini's  Tosca; Bizet's Carmen; and Strauss, Jr.’s Die Fledermaus (German operetta), and Gounod’s Romeo and Juliet.. Like Music 103, it  fulfills a Group A requirement.  If you enroll for Musc 104 and are denied access because the course is full, contact Prof. Peterson to gain entrance.

 

LISTENING FOR EXAMS

(sometimes you have listening examples from operas we are not studying.  The reason is that we are limited by what is on the 2 CD sets.  Some of your listening examples from by the composer under study but from other operas.)

 

Exam I (5 October)

 

1. Vocal timbre examples on multimedia lesson “Vocal Timbre I.”

2.  Examples of embellishment on multimedia lesson “Ensembles/Embellishment.”

3. All examples from Verdi’s Otello on the multimedia lesson (not the examples from Shakespeare’s Othello but the examples from the opera.  Some of these examples are motives.)

4. 4 examples to identify by composer, title of opera, title of excerpt either in Italian or English that are on the CD sets you purchased for the class: 1) The #1 Opera Album, CD 1, tk 2 (Brindisi, La Traviata), 2) tk 9 (La donna é mobile, Rigoletto); 3) CD 2, tk 14 (Di quella pira, Il Trovatore), 4) from Night at the Opera, CD 2, tk 6 (caro nome, Rigoletto, there is a recitative opening to this aria that appears first on the track.  You are responsible for the aria not the recitative.

 

Exam II (9 October) (20 examples total)

 

1. Leitmotivs and special orchestral effects in the La Boheme multimedia lesson: 16 total examples of leitmotivs and orchestral effects.

2. From the La Boheme multimedia lesson, the march in Act II.

3. From your CD Sets, identify numbers by composer, title of opera, title of excerpt in Italian or English: 1) from Night at the Opera SET, you need to know  CD 2, tk 1 (O soave fanciulla); 2) from The #1 Opera Album set, you need to recognize CD 1, tk 3 (Che gelida manina) and 3) CD 2, tk 20 (Si, Mi chiamano Mimi).

 

Exam III (30 November) (5 examples)

 

1. From your CD sets, for Mozart know: 1) Night at the Opera set, CD 2, tk 3 (Voi che sapete) and 2) from The #1 Opera Album set, know CD 1, tk 8 (Dove sono).

2. From your CD sets, know for Rossini: 1) Night at the Opera set, CD 1, tk 7 (Al piu dolce, L’Inganno felice); 2) CD 1, tk 11 (Gia d’insolito ardore, L’Italiana in Algeri); 3) from The #1 Opera Album set, know CD 1, tk 12 (Largo al factotum, The Barber of Seville).

 

Final Exam (___December, time:______________, AED 207)

Ignore the information listed in your course booklet p. 13 for the listening portion of this exam.  That information was prepared in 2000 and is no longer relevant for the listening section of the final exam.  Also, ignore items 8, 9, 10 on p. 13.  For listening portion,   identify vocal examples from Vocal Timbre I lesson used for Exam I.