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SINGSPIEL

''For the racehorse, see Singspiel (horse).''
'''Singspiel''' ("song-play") (plural Singspiele) is a form of German-language music drama, regarded as a genre of opera. It is characterized by spoken dialogue, sometimes performed over music, interspersed with ensembles, popular songs, ballads and arias (which were often folk-like and strophic in nature).

Contents
Origins
Development of the Singspiel
See also
Resources
Notes

Origins


The first ''Singspiele'' were probably translations of English ballad operas from the late 18th century. In 1736 the Prussian ambassador to England commissioned a translation of the ballad opera ''The Devil to Pay''. This was successfully performed in the 1740s in Hamburg and Leipzig. A further version of this was made by Johann Hiller and C. F. Weisse in 1766, the first of a string of such collaborations which led to them being called 'the fathers of the German Singspiel'. [1]
French comic operas (''Opéra comique'') were also frequently transcribed into the German, as well. ''Singspiele'' were considered popular entertainment, and were usually performed by traveling troupes, rather than by established companies within metropolitan centers.
''Singspiel'' plots are generally comic or romantic in nature, and frequently include elements of magic, fantastical creatures, and comically exaggerated characterizations of good and evil.

Development of the Singspiel


While tragedy was a less frequent motif, it should be noted that most of the ''Singspiele'' that are still part of the modern operatic canon were those written on more serious themes, such as Ludwig van Beethoven's ''Fidelio'', or Carl Maria von Weber's ''Der Freischütz''
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart touched the genre under an imperial commission for the New National Theatre in Vienna with ''Die Entführung aus dem Serail'' in 1782. He continued to write in the genre, with works such as ''Zaide'', ''Der Schauspieldirektor'' and ''Die Zauberflöte'', although some argue that because the latter incorporates a significant number of elements from various other musical and dramatic genres, it is a work that defies such a clear-cut classification.
''Singspiel'' is considered the predecessor of German romantic opera, and many of the genre’s composers, such as Beethoven and Weber, paved the way to the more complex operatic style associated with Wagner, Richard Strauss and others. As a result of this evolution, however, ''Singspiel'' itself had become basically obsolete by the end of the 19th century. More directly it may be seen as the ancestor of the operettas of von Suppé, Johann Strauss II and their successors.
In the 20th century, Kurt Weill entitled his work Mahagonny (1927) as a 'Songspiel' (''sic'').

See also




Resources



★ Barbara Russano Hanning, Donald Jay Grout: ''Concise History of Western Music'', W.W. Norton & Company, 1998.

Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ''Singspiel.''

Notes


1. Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ''Ballad opera.''


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