If it wasn’t for Shakespeare 6 works of classic musical art

If music be the food of love, play on;
Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting,
The appetite may sicken, and so die.
That strain again! it had a dying fall:
O! it came o’er my ear like the sweet sound
That breathes upon a bank of violets,
Stealing and giving odour.
(Twelfth Night, 1.1.1-7)

Shakespeare often spoke of music in his plays, and for good reason. Poetry and music go hand in hand. So it is no surprise that composers looked to the world’s most beloved poet for inspiration.

If it wasn’t for Shakespeare we wouldn’t have these 6 great works of classic musical art.

Music

A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Mendelssohn

First written as a concert overture, Mendelssohn wrote his Midsummer Night’s Dream when he was 17 years old. In 1842, 16 years later, the composer wrote incidental music to the play, including the famous ‘Wedding March’.

Romeo and Juliet, Tchaikovsky

A passionate Russian composer meets a tragic Shakespearean love story, and the result? A turbulent orchestral fantasy, featuring angry violins, crashing cymbals. Written in 1870 it was a flop, but not one to let failure get the best of him, Tchaikovsky rewrote the ending and in 1880 gave the world what is now arguably one of the most enduring pieces of music to date. The music has been used several movies and television shows. If you’ve seen Wayne’s World, Moonraker, Clueless, and A Christmas Story, you’ve heard this music.

Ophelia-Lieder, Brahms

Brahms wrote these five songs, based on Ophelia’s poetry in Shakespeare’s play, for an 1873 performance of Hamlet.

Operas

Macbeth, Verdi

This was Verdi’s tenth opera, written in 1847. Macbeth was the first Shakespeare play that Verdi adapted for the operatic stage.

Othello, Verdi

Verdi began composing Othello in 1884. He had just recently come out of retirement and was convinced by two friends, Giulio Ricordi and Franco Faccio, that Othello would make an excellent opera because it is one of Shakespeare’s most straightforward plays. Othello would be Verdi’s most celebrated work during his lifetime.

Falstaff, Verdi

Verdi was inspired by The Merry Wives of Windsor. The opera was his second comedy, and his third work based on a Shakespeare play. Written in 1893 when Verdi was 80 years old, Falstaff would be his last opera. Though the critics praised Verdi’s balance of comedy and serious undertones, the public was underwhelmed. Contemporary audiences love the play. In 2012 the Metropolitan Opera’s production in both London and New York played to sold out crowds.

If it wasn’t for Shakespeare, book titles

This April 23 will mark the 450th birthday of William Shakespeare. At least this is the day we celebrate it. No one really knows what day he was born on. We do know he was christened on April 26 and in the Elizabethan period, christenings happened 3 days after birth so it’s a fair assumption.

I thought it would be fun to devote this month’s blogs to all things Shakespeare. And why not? For he hath bequeathed us many fine gifts. The renowned Shakespeare critic Harold Bloom believes Shakespeare invented what it means to be human, and Professor Stephen Marche lectures on how Shakespeare changed everything. Though I am not sure I would go this far, I do believe the world is a better place thanks to the Bard. So the theme this month is “If it wasn’t for Shakespeare”….

Now and again authors will throw in a line or two from one of Shakespeare’s plays. I even heard a bastardized version of “Once more unto the breaches” last night on a Game of Thrones episode. Most of time the lines are included to make a point. I have a sneaky suspicion some authors throw the line in to see if the reader is paying attention and tries to pass the line off as a nod to the intellects. Hey, did he just quote Shakespeare? Wow, he’s my kind of writer!

Other times authors use Shakespeare’s words to introduce their work. At times the intro can be a way of explaining what the book is about, while other times it may just be a line the author really likes. It may not be a key to success, it is interesting to note that several bestselling books have catchy titles thanks to Shakespeare. So I offer you the first of “If it wasn’t for Shakespeare”

Wyrd-sisters-cover

 If it wasn’t for Shakespeare we wouldn’t have these awesome book titles.

 1The Moon Is Down, John Steinbeck
2. Gaudy Night, Dorothy Sayers
3. Under the Greenwood Tree, Thomas Hardy
4 And Be a Villain, Rex Stout
5 Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury
6 Pale Fire, Vladimir Nabokov
7 Band of Brothers, Stephen Ambrose
8 The Dogs of War, Frederick Forsyth
9 There is a Tide, Agatha Christie
10 By the Pricking of My Thumbs, Agatha Chrstie
11 Not in Our Stars, M. M. Marshall
12 Chimes at Midnight, Terence White
13 The Mousetrap, Agatha Christie
14 Twice-Told Tales, Nathaniel Hawthorne
15 A Muse of Fire, A.D. Harvey
16 Strange Snow, Steve Metcalfe
17 Walk the Night, Robert C. Reinhart
18 A Plague on Both Your Houses, Robert. W. Whitaker
19 The Sound and the Fury, William Faulkner
20. Leave her to Heaven, Ben Ames Williams
21 Time out of Joint, Phillip K Dick
22. What Dreams May Come, Richard Matheson
22. Infinite Jest, David Foster Wallace
23. Wyrd Sisters, Terry Pratchett
 
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