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Opera Wars: Inside the World of Opera and the Battles for Its Future [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x28 mm, kaal: 460 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Scribner
  • ISBN-10: 1668084066
  • ISBN-13: 9781668084069
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x28 mm, kaal: 460 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Scribner
  • ISBN-10: 1668084066
  • ISBN-13: 9781668084069
Teised raamatud teemal:
Immerse yourself in the captivating and surprisingly contentious world of opera with this compelling unveiling of the art form’s bold characters and the fierce struggles that are redefining its future.

Opera breeds fanatics. There are opera groupies. Opera diehards. Opera obsessives. I’m not one of them.” With these words, Caitlin Vincent—who admits to a lifelong love-hate relationship with opera—pulls us into a thrilling, high-stakes world that few ever see. It’s all here—both edge-of-the-seat drama and cultural clashes that often spill beyond the stage and get audiences and critics thoroughly riled up.

Vincent, an award-winning librettist and trained vocalist, draws on her extensive experience and intimate interviews with twenty-nine opera insiders to unravel the complex tapestry of opera’s inner workings. From tension-filled rehearsal rooms to the grandeur of the stage, she exposes a world driven by fierce rivalries, economic pressures, and stubborn resistance to change. With humor and irreverence, she runs straight at opera’s thorniest issues—its struggles with racial and gender biases, the weight of tradition, and the agonized debate over whether to remain loyal to centuries-old composers. But this isn’t just a tale of bare-knuckled battles over political correctness. Vincent makes us feel the magic of a live performance, even if we’ve never seen one; she dissects the cutthroat process of becoming a professional opera singer; and she examines how competition shapes the art form.

Whether you’re an opera devotee or a total newcomer, you’ll find Vincent’s irreverent wit and passion irresistible. Opera Wars is a must-read for anyone eager to glimpse the drama, beauty, and battles that have kept this art form alive for centuries and will undoubtedly bring to it badly needed change in the years ahead.

Arvustused

Vincent gives us the insiders backstage view from the wings, the audition session, the rehearsal roomLively and irreverent, Vincent skips across artistic war zones like one of operas clever, cheeky servant girlsOpera Wars excels in its frank glimpses of backstage life. Financial Times

Opera Wars is an unusual, if charming, book, written in a manner that is informal and engaging while addressing some matters that are beyond the concerns of a typical ticket buyer. It is suitable for young operaphiles-in-training and budding sopranos and directors alike. Wall Street Journal

Punchy...Where Opera Wars shines brightest, and where I am in most agreement with Caitlin Vincent, is in her passionate defense of new operas...Opera has a real opportunity now to push back as the true antidote to AI: no microphones, no amplifiersjust the human voice doing superhuman things. If only the business could figure out how to properly market that message to the smartphone-addicted culture. Thats certainly a war worth fighting. New York Post

Pleasantly gossipy Ultimately, whats most impressive about Opera Wars is how much nuance and fresh perspective Vincent brings to long-running debates about an art form that can seem endlessly at war with itself. Youll finish it more thoughtful about opera, but potentially more enthusiastic about it too. Limelight (AUS)

A lively debut [ with] sharp insightsDrawing on personal experience and a wealth of interviews, Vincent paints a clear-eyed picture of an art form constrained by massive costs, shrinking audiences, and bygone traditions, while also giving due to its beauty and resilience. Publishers Weekly

A behind-the-scenes look at the state of opera today, by an industry insider...[ Vincent is] well equipped to explain the nuts and bolts of an art form frequently seen as mysterious by outsiders great for opera newbies. Kirkus Reviews

Sometimes irreverent, often illuminatingThis will appeal to diehard opera fans, those who have ventured into an opera house for the first time, and those who are just curious about this distinctive world. A thoughtful consideration of an art form with a rich history and, it is hoped, a flourishing future. Booklist

Having worn the hats of operatic vocalist, company director, librettist, and commentator throughout her career, Vincent is excellently suited to pen this overview of opera and its many behind-the-scenes conflicts.[ Her] experience and accessible style make this an excellent choice for those who are unfamiliar with opera [ and] are eager to learn more. Library Journal

A delightful introduction to the workings of one of the worlds most exciting and polarizing art forms. From operas birth pangs more than four centuries ago to the economic, logistical, and cultural challenges it faces today, Opera Wars is a colorful, witty look behind the velvet curtain. Renée Fleming, Metropolitan Opera star, Recipient of the National Medal of Arts, Five-Time Grammy Winner

What a great book! Vincent shows us that opera, like all music, is by, for, and about we the people. She changed my belief that opera lives in a cloistered world; its been out there with all the other music genres just waiting to be seen and heard. Opera Wars reveals that opera is made by artists reaching for that most common prize: connecting with others. After I turned the last page, I bought my first opera ticket. Susan Rogers, Professor, Berklee College of Music, multi-platinum record producer, and coauthor of This Is What It Sounds Like

"Caitlin Vincents approach, fizzy with candid appraisals and delicious insider details, is the opposite of academic. Sometimes irreverent, frequently poignant, and always smart and entertaining, Opera Wars will appeal to anyone who loves opera, disdains it, or yearns to know the intriguing stories behind those soaring notes. Mark Campbell, librettist for the Pulitzer Prize-winning opera Silent Night   "Think opera is elitist, stuffy and boring? Then delve into Caitlin Vincent's breezy, informative look at the Queen of the Performing Arts. A professional singer, Vincent scrapes away the pretentiousness that too often hangs about the opera house to reveal the toil, the talent, the egos, the risks and, at times, the insanity, that make the opera world so dramatic. Michael Riedel, New York Times bestselling author of Razzle Dazzle: The Battle for Broadway   EngagingAn honest look at what's right and what's wrong in the world of opera by tracing it back to its roots. The research is phenomenal. Francesca Zambello, Artistic Director of Washington National Opera   A buoyant, accessible, and entertaining guideAimed at both operatic novices and veterans, Opera Wars is a portrait of opera in the 21st century that is both brutally realistic and ultimately hopeful. Joshua Kosman, former classical music critic, San Francisco Chronicle   Poignant, honest, funny, and brutal. Vincent rips the curtain from operas pretensions and shows outsiders what every insider knows: that you cannot love opera without also hating it; that the art form is both magnetic and merciless; and that the business itself is a bureaucratic mess of staggering, operatic proportions. Gabriel Wyner, former opera singer and author of the bestselling Fluent Forever

Caitlin Vincent is an award-winning librettist, trained vocalist, opera company director, and arts commentator. Her librettos have won all three of Americas top opera prizes and her vocal work is featured on the Grammy Awardnominated album 40@40. Vincent was the artistic director of The Figaro Project from 2009 to 2014. She writes frequently on the arts for such outlets as The Conversation and Limelight, and her perspective on opera has been featured in The New York Times. She holds a PhD from Deakin University (Australia), an MM from Peabody Conservatory at Johns Hopkins, and a BA from Harvard. She was born in the US but currently makes her home in Melbourne, Australia.