Lexington Books
Pages: 260
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-6973-5 • Hardback • March 2012 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-8817-0 • Paperback • October 2013 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-6974-2 • eBook • March 2012 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Clive McClelland is principal teaching fellow in the School of Music at the University of Leeds.
Introduction
Abbreviations
Chapter One - Ombra Music in Context
Chapter Two - Opera: Tonality and Key Characteristics
Chapter Three - Opera: Harmony and Line
Chapter Four - Opera: Tempo and Rhythm
Chapter Five - Opera: Texture, Dynamics, and Instrumentation
Chapter Six - Opera: Case Studies
Chapter Seven - Sacred Music (including Case Studies)
Chapter Eight - Instrumental Music (including Case Studies)
Chapter Nine - Ombra after Mozart
Appendix A
Appendix B
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Without recourse to jargon, Clive McClelland advances our understanding of the semiotics of 18th-century opera by his close study of scenes of the supernatural. Identifying a repertoire of features that make up to an 'ombra' topic, he contributes to our understanding not only of opera but of the expressive capacities of 'classical' instrumental music.
— Julian Rushton, University of Leeds
Clive McClelland’s masterful new study of the ombra style—here for the first time given the book length treatment it has long deserved—represents a milestone in the ongoing search for understanding how composers used musical conventions to communicate with their audiences. Demonstrating the pervasiveness of ombra music within a wide variety of genres and national traditions, McClelland elucidates the style’s affective qualities and rhetorical functions in the eighteenth century and points toward the future, revealing its dynamic role as an agent of stylistic change. This book will prove seminal, potentially informing inquiries ranging from aesthetics to reception and beyond.
— Margaret Butler, University of Florida
Clive McClelland guides the reader into the subterranean world inhabited by demons, ghosts and furies and reveals that these supernatural beings appeared not only on the operatic stage but also in instrumental music. This book makes an important contribution to the study of musical meaning and expression and will appeal to scholars, listeners and performers of eighteenth-century music.
— Danuta Mirka, University of Southampton
McClelland’s Ombra can be added to the growing list of studies seeking to identify the various features of a particular musical style and to examine the interaction between this style and what or how it communicated to contemporary audiences. . . . he makes a relatively convincing case throughout most of the book that ombra is, in fact, a topic that has some distinguishing features. In the quest to identify musical topics, this is certainly a large step forward. . . . it is indispensable to anyone who seeks to understand what and how eighteenth-century music communicated to audiences.
— Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association
This volume is an in depth examination of ombra and its many influences on classical music performance. Clive McClelland reveals that ombra scenes proved popular with audiences not only because of the special stage effects employed, but also due to increasing use of awe inspiring musical ethics.
— OPERA America