The Enchanter of the Flute and the Fairy Princess

The Enchanter of the Flute and the Fairy Princess
Author: The Anchanter
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 451
Release: 2020
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 166558257X

The legend says that the Enchanter of the flute had been given the mission to bring light to the kingdom of The fairy princess, and make her proclaim her melodies kingdom... If some people were right the Enchanter of the flute was a dreamer. With proves he was a poet and a romantic, some other people would say he was emotional and full of anger, he was for sure a street tramp, but he was also the Prince of melodies. If the people of The fairy princess’s kingdom had taken the courage to know him, they would have found out he was full of peace but because people misunderstood him and hated him he left the kingdom of the fairy princess to accomplish his mission without her...

The Pink Fairy Book

The Pink Fairy Book
Author: Andrew Lang
Publisher: Amereon Limited
Total Pages: 416
Release: 1897
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

41 Japanese, Scandinavian, and Sicilian tales: "The Snow-Queen," "The Cunning Shoemaker," "The Two Brothers," "The Merry Wives," "The Man without a Heart," and more. 69 illustrations.

In Search of Opera

In Search of Opera
Author: Carolyn Abbate
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2014-12-25
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1400866731

In her new book, Carolyn Abbate considers the nature of operatic performance and the acoustic images of performance present in operas from Monteverdi to Ravel. Paying tribute to music's realization by musicians and singers, she argues that operatic works are indelibly bound to the contingency of live singing, playing, and staging. She seeks a middle ground between operas as abstractions and performance as the phenomenon that brings opera into being. Weaving between opera's "facts of life" and a series of works including The Magic Flute, Parsifal, and Pelléas, Abbate explores a spectrum of attitudes towards musical performance, which range from euphoric visions of singers as creators to uncanny images of musicians as lifeless objects that have been resuscitated by scripts. In doing so, she touches upon several critical issues: the Wagner problem; coloratura, virtuosity, and their critics; the implications of disembodied voice in opera and film; mechanical music; the mortality of musical sound; and opera's predilection for scenes positing mysterious unheard music. An intersection between transcendence and intense physical grounding, she asserts, is a quintessential element of the genre, one source of the rapture that operas and their singers can engender in listeners. In Search of Opera mediates between an experience of opera that can be passionate and intuitive, and an intellectual engagement with opera as a complicated aesthetic phenomenon. Marrying philosophical speculation to historical detail, Abbate contemplates a central dilemma: the ineffability of music and the diverse means by which a fugitive art is best expressed in words. All serious devotees of opera will want to read this imaginative book by s music-critical virtuoso.