
Opera Terms
The
Bel Canto Opera Company has received the kind permission of Nicholas
Reveles of San Diego Opera to display this glossary for our benefit.
We thank them for their generosity and goodwill.
A
GLOSSARY OF OPERA TERMS
ARIA
(Italian)
- An extended musical piece performed by one singer. Often very lyrical,
it is accompanied by the orchestra, and conveys the emotions of the
character. The action usually stops while an aria is sung.
ARIOSO
(Italian) - The definition varied over the centuries. In the nineteenth
century the term referred to a type of aria which is like recitative
in rhythm and not really melodic. Rigoletto's Pari siamo is an example.
ARTIST
MANAGER OR ARTIST REPRESENTATIVE -
An agent who represents artists, publicizing their talents, finding
them roles, negotiating contracts and handling other business matters
for them.
BALLET
(French) -
A form of dance that tells a story.
BANDA
(Italian) - A small group of instrumentalists who play either on the
stage or backstage, not in the pit, often as part of a crowd or military
scene.
BARITONE
- The middle male voice. BASS- The lowest
male voice.
BASS
BARITONE -
A voice between a bass and a baritone..
BATON
- A short stick which the conductor uses to lead the orchestra.
BEL
CANTO (Italian)
- Literally, "beautiful singing" or "beautiful song". Bel canto passages
are long, smooth and lyrical. While beautiful singing should occur
in
all operas, it is especially important in works of the nineteenth century
such as Don Pasquale.
BLOCKING
- Directions given to the actors for movements on the stage.
BOW,
BOWING - The
bow is the wand used to play string instruments. The concertmaster determines
when the bows should rise or fall, and this is noted in the score so
that all move in the same direction.
BRAVO (Italian)
- Literally "brave, courageous". A form of applause when shouted
by members of the audience at the end of an especially pleasing
performance.
Strictly speaking, bravo is for a single man, brava for a woman, and
bravi for a group of performers.
CABALETTA
(Italian)- Second part of a two-part aria, always in a faster tempo
than the first part. The second part of the Duke's aria in Act II of
Rigoletto is a cabaletta.
CADENZA
(Italian) - A brilliant passage inserted in an aria which gives the
singer an opportunity to show off the voice. Originally used to close
a number and often improvised on the spot.
CANZONE,
CANZONETTA
(Italian) - A folk-like song commonly used in opera buffa.
CARPENTER
- The carpenter works on the construction of the sets. Production Carpenter
is the title given to the one in charge of the backstage crew, even
though he may not actually work with wood.
CAVATINA
(Italian) - The meaning of this term has changed over the years. It
now usually refers to the opening, slow section of a two part aria.
In Rossini's time it referred to the entrance, or first, aria sung by
a certain character.
CHORD
- Several different notes sounded together. Often misused for vocal
cord.
CHOREOGRAPHER
- The person who designs the motions of a dance.
CHORUS
- A group of mixed voices or the musical passage sung by such a group.
CHORUS
MASTER - The
one in charge of choosing chorus members and rehearsing them for the
performance. If there is a back-stage chorus, it is usually conducted
by the chorus master who is in communication with the conductor of the
orchestra.
CLAQUE
(French) - A group of people hired to sit in the audience and either
applaud enthusiastically to ensure success, or whistle and boo to create
a disaster. In past years, leading singers were sometimes blackmailed
to pay a claque to insure they would not create a disturbance. Even
now, a claque is sometimes used but rarely acknowledged.
COLORATURA
(Italian) - Elaborate decoration of a vocal melody with cadenzas, roulades
and trills. Also used to describe a voice type.
COMMEDIA
DELL'ARTE
(Italian) - A type of comic opera popular in Italy in the 16th to 18th
centuries. They toured with both literary plays and others that were
improvised using stock characters and gestures. The characters were
often masked to represent certain types. Don Pasquale is basically an
example of this genre.
COMPOSER
- The one who writes the music and orchestrates it.
COMPRIMARIO
(Italian) - A secondary or supporting role or a person singing such
a role.
CONCERTMASTER -
The "first chair" violinist who plays occasional solos and is responsible
for coordinating all of the stringed instruments. The concert master
decides on the bowing, so that all of the string player's bows move
in unison.
CONDUCTOR
- The leader of the orchestra. The conductor is usually able to play
several instruments, speak several languages, and can read music as
easily as reading words.
CONTINUO
(Italian)
- An extemporized chordal accompaniment for recitativo secco, usually
by a harpsichord, cello or double bass. Opera seria often used an ensemble
of harpsichord and theorbo (member of the lute family). Opera buffa
used a single keyboard and string bass.
CONTRALTO
- The lowest female voice.
CORD, VOCAL
- The wishbone-shaped edges of muscles in the lower part of the throat
whose movements creates variations in pitch as air passes between
them.
Often spelled incorrectly as "chord".
COSTUME
DESIGNER -
Works with the set designer to prepare costumes which are appropriate
for the rest of the production. Often oversees the preparation of the
costumes.
COSTUME
SHOP - A special
area set aside for the making of the costumes or for adjusting of those
which are rented.
COVER
- The name given to an understudy in opera; someone who replaces a singer
in case of illness or other misfortune.
CRESCENDO
(Italian) - A gradual increase in volume. Orchestral crescendos were
one of Rossini's trademarks.
CUE
- A signal to a singer or orchestra member to begin singing or playing.
CURTAIN
CALL - At
the end of a performance all of the members of the cast and the conductor
take bows. Sometimes this is done in front of the main curtain, hence
the name curtain call. Often, however, the bows are taken on the full
stage with the curtain open.
CUT
- Omit some
of the original material from the score.
DA
CAPO ARIA
- An aria in the form ABA. A first section is followed by a shorter
second section. Then the first is repeated, usually with added ornamentaion.
DIAPHRAGM
- A muscle beneath the lungs and above the stomach which acts as a trampoline
does, pushing the air from the lungs at the desired rate.
DIRECTOR
- See STAGE
DIRECTOR.
DIVA
(Italian)
- Literally "goddess", it refers to an important female opera star.
The masculine form is divo.
DOUBLE
ARIA - An
aria which consists of two parts. The first part, or cavatina, is usually
slow and the second, or cabaletta is faster. There is often recitative
between the two sections.
DOWNSTAGE
- See STAGE AREAS.
DRAMATIC
(Voice type) - The heaviest voice, capable of sustained declamation
and a great deal of power, even over the largest operatic orchestra
of about 80 instruments. This description applies to all voice categories
from soprano to bass.
DRESS
(a wig) - To prepare a wig for wear.
DRESSER
- A member of the backstage staff who helps the artists don their costumes.
The principal singers usually have their own. Supers and chorus members
share dressers.
DRESS
REHEARSAL
- The final rehearsal, using all of the costumes, lights, etc. While
sometimes it is necessary to stop for corrections, an attempt is made
to make it as much like a final performance as possible.
DUET
- An extended
musical passage performed by two singers. They may or may not sing simultaneously.
DYNAMICS
- The degree of loudness and softness in the music. See PIANO and FORTE.
ENCORE (French)
- Literally means "again". It used to be the custom for a singer
to repeat a popular aria if the audience called "Encore" loudly enough.
This is still done in countries like Italy in the middle of an opera,
but is rare elsewhere. Soloists still frequently give encores at the
end of a concert but not an opera.
ENSEMBLE
- Any extended musical passage performed by four or more players, usually
singing simultaneously, but often with different words and different
musical lines. Many ensembles consist of combinations of solos, duets,
etc. rather than all singing together throughout.
FALSETTO
- A method of singing above the natural range of a voice. Often used
in opera for comic effects such as a man imitating a woman.
FINALE
- The last set of numbers in an act. It usually involves many singers
and is very dramatic. By convention it can be very long and include
a number of arias, duets, etc., but never any recitative.
FLY,
FLY TOWER
- If there is high space above the stage called a fly tower, pieces
of the set are often raised up or flown out of sight when not in use.
FORTE,
FORTISSIMO
(Italian) - Loud, very loud.
GENERAL
DIRECTOR -
The head of an opera company. The one ultimately responsible for all
artistic and financial aspects of everything in which the company is
involved.
GRAND
OPERA - Strictly
speaking, means opera without spoken dialogue. It is usually used to
refer to opera which uses a large orchestra and chorus and grand themes.
HELDEN -
German prefix meaning "heroic". Can apply to other voices but usually
used in Heldentenor.
IMPRESARIO
(Italian) - The general director of an opera company.
INTERLUDE
OR INTERMEZZO
- An orchestral selection played between scenes in an opera. It is used
to set a mood and even advance the story.
INTERMISSION
- A break between acts of an opera. The lights go on, and the audience
is free to move around. Intermissions usually last about twenty minutes.
LEGATO
(Italian) - A smooth line of music with no noticeable breaks.
LEITMOTIV
(German) or MOTIF - A short musical phrase associated with a particular
character or event.
LIBRARIAN
- In charge
of preparing the music for the orchestra. Scores are usually rented.
They have to be annotated to reflect cuts and other changes for a given
production.
LIBRETTO (lih-BRETT-oh)
- Italian for the text of the opera. It means "little
book" in Italian. A libretto is shorter than the book for a stage play,
because it takes much longer to sing a line than to say it. The action
is often interrupted for an aria, limiting the length of the text even
more. The libretto is written by a librettist, who is usually a poet
or a playwright.
LIGHTING
DESIGNER -
Lights affect the appearance and mood of a show. The audience is not
aware of it, but there are often hundreds of light changes during a
show. All this has to be designed and entered into the computer which
controls the lights.
LYRIC
(Voice type) - A light- to medium-weight voice with an innocent quality,
capable of both sustained, forceful singing and delicate effects.
MAESTRO (Italian)
- Literally "master"; used as a courtesy title for the conductor.
The masculine ending is used for both men and women.
MAGIC
OPERA - An
opera in which there are many magical effects and often animals appearing
on stage. Often the plot of a magic opera involves the rescue of one
of the major characters.
MAKEUP
DESIGNER -
Stage makeup often has to be specially designed to make the singer assume
a different appearance, for example to be made older or fit an ethnic
role. Even if the singers appearance doesn't need to be changed, stage
makeup has to be designed to look right under the lighting used for
the show.
MARK
- To sing very softly or not at full voice. A full-length opera is very
hard on a singer's voice so most mark during rehearsals. During dress
rehearsals singers try to sing at full voice for at least some of the
time.
MEZZO
SOPRANO -
The middle female voice.
MUSICAL
COMEDY - See
OPERETTA.
NUMBER
OPERA - An
opera composed of individual numbers such as recitative, arias, duets,
ensembles, etc. Between the numbers there is often a chance for applause.
Don Pasquale is a number opera.
OPERA (Latin)
- A drama that is sung, but is not just a play with music; the orchestra
is an equal partner with the singers. Literally, the word
opera is the plural of the Latin word opus, which means "work". Like
a play, an opera is acted on a stage with costumes, wigs, scenery,
etc.
Almost all of it is sung, in contrast to an operetta or musical, where
a great deal of the text is spoken.
OPERA
BUFFA (Italian)
- An opera about ordinary people, usually, but not always comic, which
first developed in the eighteenth century.
OPERA
SERIA (Italian)
- A "serious" opera. The usual characters are gods and goddesses, or
ancient heroes. Rossini was one of the last to write true opere serie.
OPERA
TEXT - See
SUPERTITLES.
OPERETTA
or MUSICAL COMEDY
- A play, much of which is spoken but with many musical numbers.
ORCHESTRA,
ORCHESTRATION
- The orchestra is a group of instrumentalists playing a variety of
instruments. The scoring of a musical work with separate musical lines
for each instrument is the orchestration.
OVERTURE
- An orchestral piece, several minutes in length, which is played before
the beginning of an opera. Usually, but not always, it contains some
themes from the music of the opera.
PANTS PART
- See TROUSER ROLE
PARLANDO
(Italian) - A style of singing like ordinary speech. It can occur in
the middle of an aria.
PATTER
SONG - A song or aria in which the character sings as many words
as possible in the shortest time.
PIANO,
PIANISSIMO
- Quiet, very quiet.
PIANO-VOCAL
SCORE - See SCORE.
PIT
- A sunken
area in front of the stage where the members of the orchestra sit.
PITCH -
Sound results from the vibration of a source such as a string or
drum head. The pitch depends on the rapidity of the vibrations. Rapid
vibrations
produce higher notes than slower one. The most common pitch now is
based on A=440 vibrations per second. This is "la" or the second
space up on the treble staff. In past years the standard pitch was
usually lower
(Verdi preferred A=432).
PIZZICATO
(Italian) - When a string instrument is played by plucking the strings
instead of using the bow.
PRELUDE
- Usually a short introduction, without an ending, that leads into an
act without pause, as opposed to an overture which is longer and can
be played as a separate piece. Wagner called his introductions preludes
even though some are quite long.
PRIMA
DONNA (Italian)
- Literally "first lady", the leading woman singer in an opera. Because
of the way some of them behaved in the past, it often refers to someone
who is acting in a superior and demanding fashion. The term for the
leading man is primo uomo.
PRODUCTION
- The combination of sets, costumes, props, lights, etc.
PRODUCTION
CARPENTER
- In charge of organizing and handling all aspects of the sets and equipment.
PRODUCTION
MANAGER -
The administrator responsible for coordinating the sets, costumes, rehearsal
facilities and all physical aspects of a production. Is often the one
who negotiates with the various unions representing stage hands, musicians,
etc.
PROMPT
- To help
a singers remember lines. In some opera houses, the prompter sits in
a box below and at the very front of the stage. It is not customary
for San Diego Opera to use a prompter.
PROPS
(PROPERTIES)
- Small items carried or used by singers during the performance.
PROSCENIUM
- The front opening of the stage which frames the action.
QUARTET
- Piece for four singers.
QUINTET
- Piece for five singers.
RECITATIVE
(re-si-ta-TEEV) (Italian) - Lines of dialogue which are sung, but usually
with no recognizable melody; the singing has a rhythm more like normal
speech than that of an aria. Recitative is used to advance the plot
between numbers. Recitativo secco (re-tchee-ta-TEE-voh SEK-koh) is accompanied
only by continuo such as a harpsichord, sometimes with added cello.
There is also recitativo accompagnato (re-tchee-ta-TEE-voh ahk-KAHM-pan-eah-toh)
which is accompanied by the orchestra. In early opera this was reserved
for the nobility. In later operas it is used for all singers.
REDUCTION
- In a piano
reduction, the orchestra parts are condensed into music which can be
played by one person on the piano.
REPERTOIRE
- The stock of pieces a singer or company has ready to present. Often
refers to a company's current season.
REPETITEUR
- A member of the music staff who plays the piano for rehearsals and,
if necessary, the piano or harpsichord during performances. Frequently
coaches singers in their roles and assists with orchestra rehearsals.
ROULADE
or RUN - A
quick succession of notes sung to one syllable.
SCENA
(SCHAY-nah) (Italian) - Literally a scene. A dramatic episode which
consists of a variety of number types with a common themes. A typical
scena might consist of a recitative, a cavatina and a cabaletta.
SCORE
- The written music for an opera with separate lines for each instrument
and each singer's vocal parts.
SET,
SET DESIGNER
- The background and furnishings on the stage.
SEXTET -
A piece for six singers.
SITZPROBE
(ZITS-proh-bah)
- German for seated rehearsal', it is the first rehearsal of the singers
with the orchestra, with the former seated, and no acting.
SOPRANO
- The highest female voice.
SOUBRETTE
(French) - Pert young female character with a light soprano voice.
SPINTO
(Voice type) - A lyric voice that has the power and incisiveness for
dramatic climaxes.
STAGE
AREAS - Refers
to the various sections of the stage. Left and right are as seen by
those on stage, not in front. Since many stages are raked, that is
higher
in back than in front, upstage is at the back, and downstage at the
front. If an actor stays upstage, all the others have to turn their
backs to the audience when speaking to him. This is the origin of the
phrase "to upstage someone".
STAGE
DIRECTOR -
The one responsible for deciding the interpretation of each character,
the movements of the singers on stage, and other things affecting the
singers. Is in charge at rehearsals.
STAGE
MANAGER -
The one in charge of the technical aspects of the entire opera while
it is running. Cues all light changes, sound effects, entrances (even
of the conductor) and everything else that happens.
SUPERNUMERARY -
An "extra", someone who is part of a group on stage but doesn't sing.
It is usually shortened to Super.
SUPERTITLES
- Translations
of the words being sung which are projected on a screen above the stage.
SYNOPSIS
- A short version of the story of the opera, usually one or two pages.
TEMPO
- The speed of the music.
TENOR
- The highest
male voice.
TESSITURA (Italian)
- Literally "texture", it defines the average pitch level
of a role. Two roles may have the same range from the lowest to the
highest note, but the one with a greater proportion of high notes
has
the higher tessitura.
THROUGH-SUNG -
An opera in which the music is continuous, without divisions into
recitative and aria. Der fliegende Hollnder is through-sung, while
Don Pasquale is not.
TRAGEDIE
LYRIQUE (French)
- Early form of French opera which recognized a distinction between
the main scenes and divertissements which consisted of choruses, dances,
etc.
TREMOLO
(Italian) - Wavering of pitch while singing a note. It is usually inadvertent
as opposed to a trill (see below). It is also called vibrato.
TRILL
- The deliberate rapid alteration of adjacent notes.
TRIO
- A sustained
musical passage for three voices.
TROUSER
ROLE - A role
which depicts a young man or boy, but is sung by a woman. Ariodante
is a trouser role.
VERISMO (Italian)
- Describes the realistic style of opera that started in Italy at
the end of the nineteenth century. Although the peak of the movement
was past by the time of Puccini, his operas are a modified form of
verismo.
He takes realistic situations but treats them as romances and sets
them in exotic locations, such as in the Paris of La bohme.
VIBRATO
(Italian) - see Tremolo VOCAL
COACH
- A member of an opera company who coaches singers, helping them with
the singing and interpretation of a role.
WIG
DESIGNER -
Designs and oversees the creation of the wigs used in a production.
Revised December, 2001 by EAO