![]() |
![]() ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Opera in Video
Opera in Video contains 250 of the most important opera performances, captured on video through staged productions, interviews, and documentaries, and then delivered online through streaming video. Selections represent the world’s best performers, conductors, and opera houses and are based on a work’s importance to the operatic canon. The result is a dynamic and powerful resource for performers, researchers, and students.
The database lets users bookmark specific scenes, acts, arias—even a single recitative passage—and then include the links in papers and course reserves. Instructors and students can annotate and share these personally selected segments during classroom lectures or teaching assignments. With these and other powerful Web tools, Opera in Video will be an essential new resource for study in this area.
The collection presents an overview of the most commonly studied operas in music history, opera literature, and performance classes. Multiple performances and stagings worldwide of the major operas allow for analysis of stage design, vocal techniques, roles, and musical interpretation across time periods, opera houses, and conductors.
Together with Alexander Street’s online music listening and reference databases, Classical Scores Library and Classical Music Reference Library, students and researchers now have a single place to find the entire performance of an opera; the full online score with rekeyed, searchable text; the performance history; and the production background.
Content
Opera in Video offers more than 500 hours of streaming video, available electronically for the first time. Classic performances from the top opera companies and documentaries on specific operas, composers, and companies cover the full range of operatic composition, from the Baroque to the 20th century—a welcome permanent addition to your library collection.
Performances targeted for Opera in Video include Carmen, with Maria Ewing conducted by Zubin Mehta (1991); Billy Budd, with Thomas Allen and Richard Langridge conducted by David Atherton (1988); Julius Caesar, with Janet Baker, Sarah Walker, and Valerie Masterson conducted by Charles Mackerras (1984); L’Africaine, with Placido Domingo, Shirley Verrett, and Ruth Ann Swenson conducted by Maurizio Arena (1988); La Bohème, with Mirella Freni, Luciano Pavarotti, and Nicolai Ghiaurov conducted by Tiziano Severini (1988); Capriccio, with Kiri Te Kanawa, Simon Keenlyside, and Victor Braun conducted by Donald Runnicles (1993); Orlando Furioso, with Marilyn Horne, Susan Patterson, and Sandra Walker conducted by Randall Behr (1989); Aida, with Maria Chiara, Luciano Pavarotti, and Nicolai Ghiaurov conducted by Lorin Maazel (1985); The Rake’s Progress, with Kiri Te Kanawa, Felicity Lott, Frederica von Stade, Ileana Cotrubas, and Thomas Allen conducted by Sylvain Cambreling (1996); and hundreds more.
How will you use it?
Opera in Video brings a new dimension to nearly all aspects of performance studies and production history:
Specially developed controlled vocabularies let users browse by composer, genre, performer, librettist, and time period. The search can be simple or complex, using one search field or combining all. Queries such as Show all Baroque operas written in 1724 or Find all examples of cavatinas sung by a soprano are easy to answer from a single search screen. Once the user identifies a video, a click delivers the entire work for viewing over the Internet.
Opera in Video expands your library’s existing collection of video recordings, while minimizing the problem of damaged or lost VHS or DVD copies and saving shelf space. Both beginner and advanced users will use the service for teaching, learning, and research.
Publication Details
Opera in Video is available on the Web beginning in summer of 2008, either through one-time purchase of perpetual rights or annual subscription. The database will contain more than 500 hours of streaming video productions, including more than 250 performances and documentaries. The service works on PCs or Macs and requires no set-up—all you need is an Internet browser.
The collection is part of Alexander Street’s growing series of online databases in music and the performing arts, including Music Online: Listening; Music Online: Reference; Theatre in Video; and Dance in Video.
For more information, and to arrange now for a free trial when the database is live, please visit http://alexanderstreet.com or email sales@alexanderstreet.com. |
© Copyright 2008 Alexander Street Press. All rights reserved. Last Updated: 18-Apr-2008 |