Zarzuela
Zarzuela (Spanish pronunciation: [θarˈθwela]) is a Spanish lyric-dramatic genre that alternates between spoken and sung scenes, the latter incorporating operatic and popular song, as well as dance. The etymology of the name is uncertain, but some propose it may derive from the name of a Royal hunting lodge, the Palacio de la Zarzuela near Madrid, where, allegedly, this type of entertainment was first presented to the court.[1] The palace was named after the place called "La Zarzuela" because of the profusion of brambles (zarzas) that grew there, and so the festivities held within the walls became known as "Zarzuelas".
There are two main forms of zarzuela: Baroque zarzuela (c. 1630–1750), the earliest style, and Romantic zarzuela (c. 1850–1950), which can be further divided into two. Main subgenres are género grande and género chico, although other sub-divisions exist.
Zarzuela spread to the Spanish colonies, and many Hispanic countries – notably Cuba – developed their own traditions. There is also a strong tradition in the Philippines where it is also known as sarswela/sarsuela.[2] Other regional and linguistic variants in Spain include the Basque zartzuela and the Catalan sarsuela.
A masque-like musical theatre had existed in Spain since the time of Juan del Encina. The zarzuela genre was innovative in giving a dramatic function to the musical numbers, which were integrated into the argument of the work. Dances and choruses were incorporated as well as solo and ensemble numbers, all to orchestral accompaniment.
Baroque zarzuela
In 1657 at the Royal Palace of El Prado, King Philip IV of Spain, Queen Mariana and their court attended the first performance of a new comedy by Pedro Calderón de la Barca, with music by Juan Hidalgo de Polanco titled El Laurel de Apolo (The Laurels of Apollo). El Laurel de Apolo traditionally symbolises the birth of a new musical genre that had become known as La Zarzuela.
Like Calderón de la Barca's earlier El golfo de las sirenas (The Sirens' Gulf, 1657), El Laurel de Apolo mixed mythological verse drama with operatic solos, popular songs and dances. The characters in these early, baroque zarzuelas were a mixture of gods, mythological creatures and rustic or pastoral comedy characters; Antonio de Literes's popular Acis y Galatea (1708) is yet another example. Unlike some other operatic forms, there were spoken interludes, often in verse.
Italian influence
In 18th-century Bourbon Spain, Italian artistic style dominated in the arts, including Italian opera. Zarzuela, though still written to Spanish texts, changed to accommodate the Italian vogue. During the reign of King Charles III, political problems provoked a series of revolts against his Italian ministers; these were echoed in theatrical presentations. The older style zarzuela fell out of fashion, but popular Spanish tradition continued to manifest itself in shorter works, such as the single-scene tonadilla (or intermezzo) of which the finest literary exponent was Ramón de la Cruz. Musicians such as Antonio Rodríguez de Hita were proficient in the shorter style of works, though he also wrote a full-scale zarzuela with de la Cruz entitled Las segadoras de Vallecas (The Reapers of Vallecas, 1768). José Castel was one of several composers to write for the Teatro del Príncipe.
19th century
In the 1850s and 1860s a group of patriotic writers and composers led by Francisco Barbieri and Joaquín Gaztambide revived the zarzuela form, seeing in it a possible release from French and Italian music hegemony. The elements of the work continue to be the same: sung solos and choruses, spiced with spoken scenes, and comedic songs, ensembles and dances. Costume dramas and regional variations abound, and the librettos (though often based on French originals) are rich in Spanish idioms and popular jargon.
The zarzuelas of the day included in their librettos various regionalisms and popular slang, such as that of Madrid castizos. Often, the success of a work was due to one or more songs that the public came to know and love. Despite some modifications the basic structure of the zarzuela remained the same: dialogue scenes, songs, choruses, and comic scenes generally performed by two actor-singers. The culminating masterpieces from this period were Barbieri's Pan y toros and Gaztambide's El juramento. Another notable composer from this period was Emilio Arrieta.
Romantic zarzuela
After the Glorious Revolution of 1868, the country entered a deep crisis (especially economically), which was reflected in theatre. The public could not afford high-priced theatre tickets for grandiose productions, which led to the rise of the Teatros Variedades ("variety theatres") in Madrid, with cheap tickets for one-act plays (sainetes). This "theatre of an hour" had great success and zarzuela composers took to the new formula with alacrity. Single-act zarzuelas were classified as género chico ("little genre") whilst the longer zarzuelas of three acts, lasting up to four hours, were called género grande ("grand genre"). Zarzuela grande battled on at the Teatro de la Zarzuela de Madrid, founded by Barbieri and his friends in the 1850s. A newer theatre, the Apolo, opened in 1873. At first it attempted to present the género grande, but it soon yielded to the taste and economics of the time, and became the "temple" of the more populist género chico in the late 1870s.
Musical content from this era ranges from full-scale operatic arias (romanzas) through to popular songs, and dialogue from high poetic drama to lowlife comedy characters. There are also many types of zarzuela in between the two named genres, with a variety of musical and dramatic flavours.
Many of the greatest zarzuelas were written in the 1880s and 1890s, but the form continued to adapt to new theatrical stimuli until well into the 20th century. With the onset of the Spanish Civil War, the form rapidly declined, and the last romantic zarzuelas to hold the stage were written in the 1950s.
Whilst Barbieri produced the greatest zarzuela grande in El barberillo de Lavapiés, the classic exponent of the género chico was his pupil Federico Chueca, whose La gran vía (composed with Joaquín Valverde Durán) was a cult success both in Spain and throughout Europe.
The musical heir of Chueca was José Serrano, whose short, one act género chico zarzuelas - notably La canción del olvido, Alma de dios and the much later Los claveles and La dolorosa - form a stylistic bridge to the more musically sophisticated zarzuelas of the 20th Century.
While the zarzuela featured, even glorified popular customs, festivals, and manners of speech, especially those of Madrid, something never found in a zarzuela is social criticism. The zarzuela celebrated the established order of society; if it wanted any change it was that progress or change should be slowed or eliminated.
Twentieth century
From about 1900, the term género ínfimo ("degraded" or "low genre") was coined to describe an emerging form of entertainment allied to the revista and comedy musical ("revue"): these were musical works similar to the género chico zarzuela but lighter and bolder in their social criticism,[3] with scenes portraying sexual themes and many verbal double entendres. One popular work from the género ínfimo years is La corte de Faraón (1910), by Vicente Lleó, which was based on the French operetta Madame Putiphar.
In the second decade of the century, the influences of operetta Wien and the English followers of Sullivan such as Lionel Monckton[4] made themselves felt, in works such as Molinos de viento and El asombro de Damasco (both by Pablo Luna), before the Spanish tradition great acts was reasserted in Vives's Doña Francisquita (1923). The zarzuela continued to flourish in the 1930s, thanks to composers of the stature of Pablo Sorozábal – who reinvigorated it as a vehicle for socio-political comment – Federico Moreno Torroba, and Francisco Alonso.
However, the Spanish Civil War brought a decline of the genre but Rosa de Triana (1937) or La reina Fea (1941) of Manuel López Quiroga are greats works, and after the Second World War, its extinction as a live genre was almost total. There were no new authors and the compositions are not renovated. There have been no significant new works created since the 1950s; the existing zarzuela repertoire is costly to produce, and many classics have been performed only sporadically in recent years, at least professionally.
The genre has again found favour in Spain and elsewhere: younger people, in particular, have been drawn to its lyrical music and theatrical spectacle in the 1940s and 1950s. Spanish radio and television have dedicated time to zarzuela in 1978, not least in a popular series of programs produced by TVE and entitled Antología de la zarzuela ("Zarzuela Anthology"). These were based on lip syncs of the classic recordings of the 1940s and 1950s. Some years earlier, impresario José Tamayo worked a theatrical show of the same name which popularized pieces of zarzuela through several national and international tours.[5]
Zarzuela in Catalonia
While the zarzuela tradition flourished in Madrid and other Spanish cities, Catalonia developed its own zarzuela, with librettos in Catalan. The atmosphere, the plots, and the music were quite different from the model that triumphed in Madrid; the Catalan zarzuela was looking to attract a different public, the bourgeois classes. Catalan zarzuela was turned little by little into what is called, in Catalan, teatre líric català ("Catalan lyric theater"), with a personality of its own, and with modernista lyricists and composers.
In the final years of the 19th century, as modernisme emerged, one of the notable modernistas, and one of Felipe Pedrell's pupils, Amadeo Vives came onto the Barcelona scene. He contributed to the creation of the Orfeó Català in 1891, along with Lluís Millet. In spite of a success sustained over many years, his musical ambition took him to Madrid, where zarzuela had a higher profile. Vives became one of the most important zarzuela composers, with such masterpieces as Doňa Francisquita, La villana (both based on plays by Lope de Vega) and the through-written opera in zarzuela style Maruxa.
Zarzuela in Cuba and the Philippines
In Cuba the afrocubanismo zarzuelas of Ernesto Lecuona (María la O; El cafetal), Eliseo Grenet (La virgen morena) and Gonzalo Roig (Cecilia Valdés, based on Cirilo Villaverde's classic novel) represent a brief golden age of political and cultural importance. These and other works centred on the plight of the mulata woman and other black underclasses in Cuban society. The outstanding star of many of these productions was Rita Montaner.
Mexico and the Philippines likewise had their own zarzuela traditions. In the Philippines, the zarzuela (or sarsuwela) was supported financially by First Lady Imelda Marcos. In addition, Zarzuela Ilocana have been staged in the Ilokano language.[2]
Recorded zarzuela
From 1950 onwards, zarzuela prospered in a series of LP recordings from EMI, Hispavox and others, with worldwide distribution. A series produced by the Alhambra company of Madrid, the majority conducted by the leading Spanish conductor Ataulfo Argenta had particular success. Many featured singers soon to become world-famous, such as Teresa Berganza, Alfredo Kraus and Pilar Lorengar; and later, Montserrat Caballé and Plácido Domingo. Less known performers such as Ana María Iriarte, Inés Ribadeneira, Toñy Rosado, Carlos Munguía, Renato Cesari, and others frequently lent their voices to the recordings. The choirs of Orfeón Donostiarra and Singers' Choir of Madrid also contributed, rounding out the overall quality of the works. After Argenta's death others such as Indalecio Cisneros and Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos continued in his footsteps. There were also recordings made conducted by the composers themselves, such as Pablo Sorozábal and Federico Moreno Torroba. Many well-known singers, including Victoria de los Angeles and Montserrat Caballé, have recorded albums of zarzuela songs and arias.
Many zarzuela productions are now to be seen on DVD and Blu-ray disc. In March 2009, EuroArts released Amor, Vida de Mi Vida, a recording on Blu-ray disc of an August 2007 zarzuela concert by Plácido Domingo and Ana María Martínez, with the Mozarteum Orchestra of Salzburg conducted by Jesús López-Cobos.[6] In April 2009, BBC/Opus Arte released a Blu-ray disc of a July 2006 performance of Federico Moreno Torroba's Luisa Fernanda with Plácido Domingo and Nancy Herrera, recorded at the Teatro Real de Madrid with Jesús López-Cobos conducting.[7]
Zarzuela composers
Spanish zarzuelas (including zarzuela-style operas)
- Adiós a la bohemia (1933) Pablo Sorozábal
- Agua, azucarillos y aguardiente (1898) Federico Chueca
- La alegría de la huerta (1900) Federico Chueca
- El año pasado por agua (1889 ) Federico Chueca
- El asombro de Damasco (1916) Pablo Sorozábal
- Alma de Dios (1907) José Serrano
- El barberillo de Lavapiés (1874) Francisco Asenjo Barbieri
- El bateo (1901) Federico Chueca
- Black, el payaso (1942) Pablo Sorozábal
- La boda de Luis Alonso (1896) Gerónimo Giménez
- Los burladores (1948) Pablo Sorozábal
- Bohemios (1904) Vives.
- La bruja (1889) Ruperto Chapí
- La calesera (1925) Francisco Alonso
- La canción del olvido (1928) José Serrano
- El caserío (1926) Jesús Guridi
- El chaleco blanco (1890) Federico Chueca
- La chulapona (1934) Federico Moreno Torroba
- Los claveles (1929) José Serrano
- La corte de Faraón (1910) Vicente Lleó
- Los diamantes de la corona (1854) Francisco Asenjo Barbieri
- La Dogaresa (1916) Rafael Millán
- La dolorosa (1930) José Serrano
- Gigantes y cabezudos (1898) Manuel Fernández Caballero
- Don Gil de Alcalá (1932) Manuel Penella
- Don Manolito (1943) Pablo Sorozábal
- Doña Francisquita (1923) Amadeo Vives
- El dúo de La africana, (1893) Manuel Fernández Caballero
- La fiesta de San Antón (1898) Tomás Torregrosa
- La fontana del placer José Castel
- Los gavilanes (1923) Jacinto Guerrero
- La generala (1912) Amadeo Vives
- Las golondrinas (1914) José María Usandizaga
- La Gran Vía (1886) Federico Chueca
- El huésped del Sevillano (1926) Jacinto Guerrero
- Jugar con fuego (1855) Francisco Asenjo Barbieri
- El juramento (1854) Joaquín Gaztambide
- Katiuska (1931) Pablo Sorozábal
- Las Leandras (1931) Francisco Alonso
- Luisa Fernanda (1932) Federico Moreno Torroba
- La del manojo de rosas (1934) Pablo Sorozábal
- Marina (1855/71) Emilio Arrieta
- Maruxa (1914) Amadeo Vives
- La leyenda del beso (1924) Reveriano Soutullo, and Juan Vert
- Me llaman la Presumida (1935) Francisco Alonso
- Molinos de viento (1910) Pablo Luna
- La montería (1923) Jacinto Guerrero
- El niño judío (1918) Pablo Luna
- Pan y toros (1864) Francisco Asenjo Barbieri
- La parranda (1928) Francisco Alonso
- La patria chica (1909) Ruperto Chapí
- La pícara molinera (1928) Pablo Luna
- La revoltosa (1897) Ruperto Chapí
- El rey que rabió (1890) Ruperto Chapí
- La rosa del azafrán (1930) Jacinto Guerrero
- El santo de la Isidra (1898) Tomás Torregrosa
- El señor Joaquín (1900) Manuel Fernández Caballero
- Los sobrinos del capitán Grant (1877) Manuel Fernández Caballero
- La del Soto del Parral (1927) Reveriano Soutullo, and Juan Vert
- La tabernera del puerto (1936) Pablo Sorozábal
- La tempestad (1882) Ruperto Chapí
- La tempranica (1900) Gerónimo Giménez
- La verbena de la Paloma (1894) Tomás Bretón
- La viejecita (1897) Manuel Fernández Caballero
- La villana (1927) Amadeo Vives
References
- ↑ Joan Corominas, Breve Dicionario Etimológico de la Lengua Castellana, Tercera Edición, 1980: Zarzuela, princ. S. XVII: el nombre de esta representación lírico-dramática viene, según algunos, del Real Sitio de la Zarzuela, donde se representaría la primera, pero la historia del vocablo no se ha averiguado bien y en su primera aparición es nombre de una danza.
- 1 2 ilocandiatreasures.com
- ↑ Doppelbauer, Max; et al. (2010). De la zarzuela al cine. Martin Meidenbauer. ISBN 978-3-89975-208-3.
- ↑ Webber, Christopher. "El asombro de Damasco (review)". Retrieved 15 January 2005.
- ↑ www.elpais.com
- ↑ dvdtalk.com review
- ↑ dvdtalk.com review
Further reading
- Alier, Roger (auct.) "Zarzuela", in L. Macy (ed.). New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Online. Accessed 4 Jul 05. (subscription access)
- Casares Rodicio, Emilio (ed.). Diccionario de la Zarzuela. España e Hispanoamérica. (2 Vols.) Madrid, ICCMU, 2002-3
- Cincotta, Vincent J. Zarzuela-The Spanish Lyric Theatre. University of Wollongong Press, rev. ed. 2011,pp. 766 ISBN 0-86418-700-9
- History of Zarzuela at Zarzuela.net
- Pizà, Antoni. Antoni Literes. Introducció a la seva obra (Palma de Mallorca: Edicions Documenta Balear, 2002) ISBN 84-95694-50-6* Salaün, Serge. El cuplé (1900-1936). (Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, 1990)
- Serna, Pierre-René. Guide de la Zarzuela - La zarzuela de Z à A. Bleu Nuit Éditeur, Paris, November 2012, 336 pp, 16,8 x 24 cm, ISBN 978-2-913575-89-9
- Young, Clinton D. Music Theater and Popular Nationalism in Spain, 1880-1930. Louisiana State University Press, 2016.
- Webber, Christopher. The Zarzuela Companion. Maryland, Scarecrow Press, 2002. Lib. Cong. 2002110168 / ISBN 0-8108-4447-8
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zarzuela. |
- Zarzuela.net edited by Christopher Webber and Ignacio Jassa Haro
- Zarzuela Discography at operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
- Zarzueleros.com in Spanish.
- The Saga Fernández-Shaw and the Lyrical Theatre (in English and Spanish]