Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part One Puccini's Musical Techniques
- Part Two Puccini's Operas
- Chapter 4 An individual voice: traditional and progressive elements in Le villi
- Chapter 5 The scattered jewels of Edgar
- Chapter 6 Towards a new country: Form and Deformation in Manon Lescaut
- Chapter 7 Sfumature: La bohème's fragmentation and sequential motions
- Chapter 8 Structural symmetries and reversals in Tosca
- Chapter 9 Madama Butterfly's transformations
- Chapter 10 Rhythms and redemption in La fanciulla del West
- Chapter 11 La rondine's Masquerades and Modernisms
- Chapter 12 Amore, dolore e buonumore: dramatic and musical coherence in Il trittico
- Chapter 13 Dawn at dusk: Puccini's trademarks in Turandot
- Appendix: Plot summaries of the operas
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 6 - Towards a new country: Form and Deformation in Manon Lescaut
from Part Two - Puccini's Operas
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part One Puccini's Musical Techniques
- Part Two Puccini's Operas
- Chapter 4 An individual voice: traditional and progressive elements in Le villi
- Chapter 5 The scattered jewels of Edgar
- Chapter 6 Towards a new country: Form and Deformation in Manon Lescaut
- Chapter 7 Sfumature: La bohème's fragmentation and sequential motions
- Chapter 8 Structural symmetries and reversals in Tosca
- Chapter 9 Madama Butterfly's transformations
- Chapter 10 Rhythms and redemption in La fanciulla del West
- Chapter 11 La rondine's Masquerades and Modernisms
- Chapter 12 Amore, dolore e buonumore: dramatic and musical coherence in Il trittico
- Chapter 13 Dawn at dusk: Puccini's trademarks in Turandot
- Appendix: Plot summaries of the operas
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
“When you come to Puccini, the composer of the latest Manon Lescaut, then indeed the ground is so transformed that you could almost think yourself in a new country.”
- Bernard Shaw, 1894For Shaw, Puccini's “new country” was “the domain of Italian opera […] enlarged by an annexation of German territory.” But Puccini's journey toward the startlingly new musical landscape we find in Manon Lescaut was not just by way of Bayreuth. Rather, Puccini's third opera breaks new ground in many other respects: Manon Lescaut (1893) is his first opera to have a libretto created with the active input of the composer, the first to demonstrate a specific couleur locale (here, eighteenthcentury France), and the first to involve librettists Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa (the eventual collaborators for his most successful works, La bohème, Tosca and Madama Butterfly). Musically, Manon Lescaut begins the process in Puccini's operas of exhibiting a continuous musical texture, extensive leitmotivic manipulation, the motivic parallelism of the MPI (“motivo di prima intenzione”) and utilization of the whole-tone collection.
into the wild
In this chapter we will examine the establishment and ultimate deformation of formal schemata in Manon Lescaut, and how these resonate with important aspects of the narrative. But, in order to do so, a brief look at the libretto and how it was constructed will be useful.
Abbé Prévost's Histoire du chevalier Des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut, the seventh, final volume of his Memoires et aventures d'un homme de qualité qui s'est retiré du monde (1731), also begins with a voyage to a new country. When we first see Manon she is in chains, a prisoner shackled to prostitutes, and bound for exile to America. Yet a “man of quality,” the Marquis de Renoncour, takes pity on this belle fille and, despite her condition, imagines that she seems a person of high birth. Soon, Renoncour meets her lover, Renato Des Grieux, to whom he lends money.
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- Information
- Recondite HarmonyEssays on Puccini's Operas, pp. 129 - 150Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012