Five Best Operas for Beginners - The Operas You Should See First - Keep It Classical

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • Here are the five best operas for beginners. If you're not sure what operas you should see first, this list is for you. Opera can be intimidating when you're just starting out, but it doesn't have to be.
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    Rachel Willis-Sørensen - Mimì
    Jonas Kauffman - Rodolfo
    Elina Garanca - Carmen
    Diana Damrau - Queen of the Night
    Michael Fabiano - Alfredo
    Venera Gimadieva - Violletta
    Hubert Zapiór - Figaro
    --------------------------------------------
    Support me on Patreon: / keepitclassical
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    --------------------------------------------
    About me: I am a conductor, published composer, professional singer, sound engineer, and producer based in Los Angeles. I love classical music and want to help as many people as possible learn more about it.
    --------------------------------------------
    Sources:
    A History of Western Music (amzn.to/2VfIzCi)
    Renaissance Music: Music in Western Europe, 1400-1600 (amzn.to/3jevvVB)
    Choral Repertoire (amzn.to/3locFhJ)
    Choral Music of the 19th Century (amzn.to/3jwiLdp)
    Choral Music of the 20th Century (amzn.to/3xliG0W)
    Music of the 17th and 18th Centuries (amzn.to/3zZXj75)
    --------------------------------------------
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    Intro Music: Short Ride in Fast Machine (John Adams) - www.youtube.co....

КОМЕНТАРІ • 198

  • @KeepitClassical
    @KeepitClassical  Рік тому +48

    "No good opera plot can be sensible, for people do not sing when they are feeling sensible." - W. H. Auden

  • @monizdm
    @monizdm 2 роки тому +91

    A word of caution on helping someone go to their first opera: don't underestimate them. My brother wanted to try opera and I thought Carmen would be a good choice. He was generally unimpressed, but a week later told me he watched "Akhnaten" on TV and loved it. I got him a ticket to the Met production and he is now a bit of an opera fan. I never would have guessed that Akhnaten could be an introduction, but his interest in ancient history and the creative staging appealed.

    • @DoctorWu23
      @DoctorWu23 Рік тому +1

      Perhaps it helps how modern it feels?

    • @philipebbrell2793
      @philipebbrell2793 Рік тому +3

      I had to wait 30 years to see a production of Akhnaten at the ENO that transferred to the Met. StunnIng, absolutely stunning. My wife who is not a Philip Glass fan, was impressed.
      My first opera was the Magic Flute, which I thought of as a concept album. Cosi Fan Tutte is my favourite opera along with Akhnaten.

    • @Kyle-ur4mr
      @Kyle-ur4mr Рік тому +5

      In my opinion you have to start with an opera whose story you are interested in

    • @JacobMinger
      @JacobMinger Рік тому +2

      @@Kyle-ur4mr my first opera was Don Giovanni followed by Madame Butterfly and then I watched The Ring Cycle.

    • @jrock2720
      @jrock2720 Рік тому

      I took my family to see Akhnaten at the Met last year. It was our first trip there and the first live opera for my children (20/17). For my wife and I, it was our second opera (The Abduction from the Seraglio being our first). We all found the performance to be mesmerizing. In some ways, a modern opera with clear storytelling is a wonderful introduction to opera.
      And let's face it, I have never ever ever seen staging like the end of the second act.

  • @enkiitu
    @enkiitu Рік тому +38

    I’ve been a professional singer for the past 35 years and have sung all of the operas mentioned here, some of them many times, especially La Boheme.
    But if I had to name the best opera for beginners I would have to say Turandot.
    It’s short with spectacular music all throughout.
    I really recommend it.

    • @SiusaidhMac
      @SiusaidhMac 9 місяців тому

      Turandot was my first. I loved it! ❤

    • @otyliaostrowska-jouie5455
      @otyliaostrowska-jouie5455 9 місяців тому

      I would say the same: Turandot = love at first sight

    • @hughjohnston
      @hughjohnston 8 місяців тому

      I'm a real philistine , ignorant, stupid and narrow minded, but I found many opera arias are just banging good ! Unfortunately the very limited education I had did not teach me Italian or French so I don't have a bloody clue what the hell they're going on about but wow what an incredibly powerful sound, you would have to be dead not to be moved by opera and the fact that only posh rich people can appreciate is yet another reason its better to be posh and rich than poor, ignorant and stupid .

    • @vesakaitera2831
      @vesakaitera2831 2 місяці тому +1

      @enkiitu, I have been interested in the classical music for the last 60 years and my pick for the number one opera is also Turandot. Although Pucini was a great composer, who had made several famous operas earlier, I still have the feeling, that in this opera he reached his absolute peak. He also used a choir in this opera for the first time and he did it very skillfully. His ability to describe the happenings and the mood of the people and the changes in it by different orchestral sounds was suberb. It is sad, that he died before he had created a suitable ending for this masterpice.
      I have two operas, which I also like very much: Mozart's Don Giovanni and Borodin't Prince Igor. Borodin is earning an extra bravado point from me, because the is treating the Polovitsian people with a great respect, a greater respect than he is showing to the Russians. That is a lot from a Russian composer.

  • @clara7517
    @clara7517 Рік тому +44

    I would add that The Magic Flute is not only a good first opera for adults but hands down the best first opera for kids. I watched it for the first time when I was ten and my little brother was eight. We were well prepared by our parents, who listened to some of the highlight arias with us ahead of time, and read the synopsis to us so we wouldn't get lost if the subtitles went too fast. We both loved it and ran around the house singing pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pageno for weeks. The following year we named our new kitten Papageno and he became the best bird catcher. ;)

    • @enkiitu
      @enkiitu Рік тому +2

      I’ve sung Magic Flute and always considered it incredibly boring. It has, as many Mozart ‘s operas do, wonderful music, but it is too long to be considered entertaining.
      My two cents.

    • @Marienkaeferisback
      @Marienkaeferisback Рік тому +2

      For kids, in my opinion, hänsel und gretel is a fantastic starting point. Especially in comparison to the magic flute as a German opera. The tunes are very singable and many of them turned into popular children’s songs. But of course magic flute is wonderful, every child loves papageno

    • @koengreen2540
      @koengreen2540 14 днів тому

      I don't really agree it is actually quite a complex plot. I feel like la traviata and Tosca are the easier plots to understand and better for beginners.

  • @KeepitClassical
    @KeepitClassical  3 роки тому +59

    Fun fact: I share a birthday with Puccini.

  • @jorgaba2865
    @jorgaba2865 2 роки тому +33

    One thing I particularly like about this list is it covers the bases really well -- comedy and tragedy, fantasy and realism, the 3 most common languages (italian, german, french), several of the big-name composers, and a 105-year span of time (1791-1896) across opera's heyday of popularity. It seems safe to say that if a newcomer will like opera at all, they'll like at least one of these.

  • @akvavit0
    @akvavit0 Рік тому +11

    You really can't go wrong with any of the 4 famous Puccini operas. Tosca, La Boheme, Madame Butterfly, and Turandot.

    • @valerietaylor9615
      @valerietaylor9615 11 місяців тому +1

      I love Turandot. It’s Puccini’s masterpiece.

  • @lauriethompson740
    @lauriethompson740 Рік тому +4

    Yes those are all good choices. I guess one simple way of approaching this might be to say 'not Wagner!' :) Although no doubt something before 'The Ring' might be a good option? In terms of the best Mozart choice, mine would be Don Giovanni, because in my view its the perfect combination of engaging story and beautiful music. You could argue Cosi fan Tutte has the most beautiful arias, but the story is so lame that it's not really a complete package in my view.

  • @wordscapes5690
    @wordscapes5690 9 місяців тому +2

    I always recommend people start with the light comedies - Mozart, Rossini, Donizetti…. Then move toward the Romantic and late Romantic composers. I disagree that Mozart is bad for beginners. They need to know only two things: recitative and aria. That is all. Le Nozze is the quintessential beginner’s opera. Every aria is a hit, the libretto is pure genius, and it contains everything: romance, comedy, and tragedy. My grandmother, a dyed-in-the-wool Wagnerite, started me with Der Ring des Nibelungen. Not an easy start. But I’m glad that she did.

    • @Lymarg
      @Lymarg 3 місяці тому

      I also think Mozart is excellent for beginners. Le Mariage de Figaro is highly entertaining. Also would recommend Don Giovanni, wonderful music throughout the entire performance ❤.

  • @Sshooter444
    @Sshooter444 Рік тому +3

    The "modern" Eurotrash stagings can really ruin an opera for a beginner

  • @ovh992
    @ovh992 2 роки тому +17

    The best opera for beginners is The Barber of Seville. Everyone should know it from the Bugs Bunny Elmer Fud cartoon. And the best part is that the best part of the opera is in the very beginning. So if you can't sit for a 2 or 3 hour opera, you can leave early (as many people do) and not miss the best part!

    • @lilliedoubleyou3865
      @lilliedoubleyou3865 Рік тому +1

      Good pick. And if they're "Seinfeld" fans, they may like it even more :D

    • @teacherlee3102
      @teacherlee3102 6 місяців тому

      I don't know about Barbiere as a first opera. It was my first and I didn't like it much: it wasn't a great production and the humour left me flat. What won me over totally was Don Giovanni! All the others seem to me to be great first operas. (I now think Barbiere is hilarious: I start laughing before it starts!)

  • @sandiburgess5902
    @sandiburgess5902 Рік тому +10

    Agree with these choices. As a retired operatic singing/performer, now voice teacher ... these are excellent choices with simple explanations. Thank you. Sharing with new students to opera.

  • @RaymondHng
    @RaymondHng 10 місяців тому +1

    Mimi of _La Boheme_ is one of the most passive heroines of an opera. I prefer Floria Tosca from _Tosca_ .
    _La Cenerentola_ by Rossini is a good opera for beginners because most people know the story of Cinderella, so they don't have to spend time trying to figure out the plot of _Cenerentola_ .

  • @zsuzsanna227
    @zsuzsanna227 3 місяці тому +1

    I know it's not really an opera, but my first experience was Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio) as a kid, and I loved it, and kept singing songs from it. I think it can be a good idea to move gradually from musicals through singspiel to opera. After that it was la Traviata with Andrea Rost, and it was beautiful, but I think I needed the gradual introduction.
    I haven't seen Carmen as a real opera yet, but turned into a skating film, Carmen On Ice with Katarina Witt, Brian Boitano and Brian Orser (world champions, Olympic champions and silver medalist), three of the greatest skaters of their time). It was a passionate performance and brought the music closer to me, as it was connected to my favourite sport.

  • @mauriat0507
    @mauriat0507 Рік тому +7

    My 5 operas for beginners.
    1. Carmen
    2. Turandot
    3. La Traviata
    4. Madama Butterfly
    5. Cavalleria Rusticana

  • @herrgoldmann2562
    @herrgoldmann2562 Рік тому +7

    We just saw Mozart`s "Zauberflöte" in the Vienna opera. It was my first time visiting an opera and it was an amazing experience.

  • @birdmanben27
    @birdmanben27 3 роки тому +33

    I always feel like L'elisir d'amore is underrated as a first opera--it's so funny and the plot is super accessible!
    Also, Rachel sings the pants off Kaufmann every time they collaborate and I love it.

  • @allonszenfantsjones
    @allonszenfantsjones Рік тому +1

    I know you can't do two Mozart's but I would take Marriage of Figaro over Magic Flute. Mostly because , well, beautiful music and it is funny. Actually no. Can't choose, do both.

  • @richardrose2606
    @richardrose2606 2 роки тому +3

    Another good opera for beginners would be Strauss' die Fledermaus. A bit of a cheat because it's an operetta - still a simple, funny plot with great music.

  • @Shahrdad
    @Shahrdad 11 місяців тому +1

    God, I hate these modern-dress productions. The story of the operas only make sense when paired with the mores and values of the era in which the story is set. Nobody would bat an eye at a slutty Violetta in modern times, and the story makes no sense. I saw a Trovatore in Vienna where the story was moved from the middle ages to the Spanish Civil War. Ridiculous.

  • @fredvaladez3542
    @fredvaladez3542 11 місяців тому +1

    Count me an old grouch, but I strongly dislike operas done in modern or abstract dress as I feel that it detracts from the original intent of the composer and does not reflect the proper ambience. I have seen everything from Gilbert and Sullivan to Wagner with these unsuitable costuming and it makes me cringe.

  • @Anna-l8v8v
    @Anna-l8v8v 15 днів тому +1

    My love for opera began around my 11 birthday. First one in the family. At that age I enjoyed a good story. So, Mozart: Zauberflöte and Le Nozze di Figaro, Smetana: The Bartered Bride, Weber: Der Freischütz, Verdi: Macbeth. I got a lot of vinyl records and my mother bravely accompanied me for five years to our small town opera (around 30 performances). A very expensive hobby for a kid. My big projects before my 15 birthday: Wagner: Meistersinger and Verdi: Don Carlo. I was very thankful for the metropolitan opera‘s stream during COVID.

  • @olliemartinelli4034
    @olliemartinelli4034 Рік тому +4

    As a child my parents would bring me and my sisters to see operas all the time, to the point where we always hated it because (obviously we were fucking children) we didn’t understand the music. However, I am so grateful now, it’s insane how those few years of exposure shape so much later on. The first opera I saw that I genuinely remember and loved was Porgy and Bess. Also the first time I ever cried at a live performance of anything was a year ago seeing Cavalleria Rusticana. Shame there’s so much stigma around opera only being for snobs. So many people don’t even realise what they’re missing out on

  • @franciscovelasco9550
    @franciscovelasco9550 Рік тому +1

    Very good recommendations BUT, The Magic Flute DOES have a Great Plot but you have to know Kabbalah (Or at least about Tarot's Major Arcana) to get it

  • @ZENOBlAmusic
    @ZENOBlAmusic 10 місяців тому +1

    It is strange no mentions Tosca, it has a feel of a more modern movie. There was some pretty bad singing in these examples, the only two decent singers was Rachel Willis-Sørensen and Diana Damrau.

  • @mikeobrien1559
    @mikeobrien1559 2 роки тому +6

    The first four I agree with. Magic Flute is a better choice than most of the rest of the Mozart operas because it has dialogue instead of recitativo. For that reason, I'd take Paggliacci over Barber. It's also shorter, and as a bonus, it ends with a murder.😻
    My parents' first date was Tristan. My mother had never seen an opera before. Can you imagine that?😳

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  2 роки тому +4

      I can't imagine that! Although, I heard a story that Ralph Vaughan Williams and Ursula Wood fell in love after they saw Tristan together.

    • @mikeobrien1559
      @mikeobrien1559 2 роки тому +1

      @@KeepitClassical At least, it wasn't Wozzeck.

    • @JacobMinger
      @JacobMinger Рік тому +1

      I love the idea of Pagliacci as an intro opera simply because the music is great, it’s short, and the plot MOVES.

    • @Ariadne-cg4cq
      @Ariadne-cg4cq Рік тому +1

      @ mike obrien Obviously the experience didn’t put your mother off! 😮

  • @subrismygoal8051
    @subrismygoal8051 Рік тому +7

    I just saw my first opera at the Met. I saw Aida and it was absolutely breathtaking!!

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay Рік тому

      I’m so gutted they’re ending that particular production! It looks stunning

    • @samueljaramillo4221
      @samueljaramillo4221 Рік тому

      We’ve attended that spectacular Met Aida 4 times and never get tired of it.

  • @nicholasprakash3411
    @nicholasprakash3411 Рік тому +9

    I would also include Gershwin's Porgy and Bess. It's sung in English, it's usually a 2 act opera, and most people know "Summertime" and "Bess, you is my woman now." It's the greatest American opera of all time.

    • @louisc.gasper7588
      @louisc.gasper7588 Рік тому

      Certainly a very accessible opera, except that it's seldom performed, due to the restriction put on it by George and Ira Gershwin, who specified that only blacks could sing the parts aside from the sheriff.

    • @nicholasprakash3411
      @nicholasprakash3411 Рік тому

      @@louisc.gasper7588 The Atlanta Opera has performed it twice. I think it should become a staple for them. I've seen more companies do it including the Met. Plus with more African-Americans entering the opera singer field, it could be performed moe. Also Broadway.

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому

      You’re right about Porgy. But keep in mind that it’s very long, especially in the edition I saw at the Met many years ago. Everything about it was great, but it seemed as long as Tristan.

  • @drekfletch
    @drekfletch Рік тому +3

    I am giving this video a thumbs up solely for introducing me to Hubert Zapiór.
    My first opera was Il Trovatore, and I don't think it gets enough appreciation. I bought the cd just for the Anvil Chorus, and discovered Stride la vampa and Di quella pira (curse my baritone range, taunting me with that aria).

  • @brucealanwilson4121
    @brucealanwilson4121 8 місяців тому +2

    My first was COSI FAN TUTTE. SImple plot, three men, three women, every character has one aria.

    • @ethan8338
      @ethan8338 6 місяців тому

      i love cosi fan tutte!!

  • @LeiaThePrincess1
    @LeiaThePrincess1 2 роки тому +5

    My first opera was Pagliacci. Still love more it more then many other.

    • @Luchoviaja
      @Luchoviaja 25 днів тому

      Not that I saw, but that I heard on an LP, a 1954 recording. Giuseppe Di Stefano (Canio), Maria Callas (Nedda), Tito Gobbi (Tonio), Rolando Panerai (Silvio), Nicola Monti (Beppe) and Tulio Serafin (conductor). I was 13 at the time (1974) and it was love at first note. It is still the gold standard to me and Pippo and Callas the best ever in my opinion.

  • @melissas4874
    @melissas4874 2 роки тому +3

    I tend to think of the Magic Flute as more of a fantasy-comedy which may be more accessible to those newer to Opera as well. It's a bit silly, but that's a good thing to me.

  • @tommyward3950
    @tommyward3950 Рік тому +2

    Rigoleto was my first opera and I loved it, completely over the top and hilarious even though its a tragedy

  • @arthurcrosby5755
    @arthurcrosby5755 2 роки тому +6

    Thank you for presenting your choices of opera for beginners. I love them. I particularly like the Bird Catcher’s (Vogelfänger) song in the Magic Flute. I am trying to learn to sing it in German!

    • @cathykrueger4899
      @cathykrueger4899 Рік тому +1

      I just happened on this while looking up the different voices and listening to each one. I’m in my seventies and found this video to be a welcome relief from today’s political scene. I will now spend time bathing my brain in opera. Thank you.

  • @LJB103
    @LJB103 Рік тому +2

    My first was Aida. I took a friend to his first opera (La Gioconda) and not only created an opera fan but a fanatical lover of Eva Marton. Two other friends had Boris Godunov and Parsifal for their first: talk about kill or cure!!!! Very good choices.

  • @FLOJo83
    @FLOJo83 Рік тому +4

    I think Donizetti’s Daughters of the Regiment is a great beginner opera! Great video!

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому

      I’d agree with that! But unfortunately, as in almost all bel canto operas, you need a GREAT soprano and tenor to make the opera come alive. Have you ever seen a bel canto opera with lousy singers? I have. And it just laid there like a flat pancake.

  • @potion27
    @potion27 2 роки тому +3

    I always said, La Boheme would be a great introduction to experience opera!

  • @claudiasantananunez7555
    @claudiasantananunez7555 Рік тому +1

    I’d say Elisir is another good one. My school played parts of it for kids and they loved it!

  • @laurahodgson6531
    @laurahodgson6531 2 роки тому +3

    Going to see my first live opera tonight at the ROH - Madama Butterfly :)

  • @hannahchristinah
    @hannahchristinah 3 роки тому +4

    Great choices! I guessed what the operas might be before I started the video, and I thought you'd pick Rigoletto over Traviata. But yup, these are solid picks.

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  3 роки тому +4

      Thank you! Rigoletto is a great choice, but Traviata I think it's just a smidge more accessible. I almost chose it; it was a tough call.

  • @minnami778
    @minnami778 Рік тому +1

    I think Puccini n Rossini are friendly for beginners. I love both of them and Donizetti also 😄

  • @anthony3557
    @anthony3557 4 місяці тому

    I tred to predict what your recommendations would be and came swiftly unstuck! I had ‘Figaro’ rather than ‘Zauberflöte’ (which is let down by acres of spoken dialogue, especially once the trials get underway), ‘La Bohème’, ‘La traviata’ and ‘Flying Dutchman’ (reasoning that if you have Verdi, you have to keep the Wagner faction happy) and, so it’s not all pre-20th century and to show opera isn’t all romance, ‘The turn of the screw’.

  • @jburgess9578
    @jburgess9578 2 роки тому +3

    This is an excellent video!
    Thank you for making it.
    The singing was so good in the performances you included that I'm now on a mission to see these exact productions (provided they have english subtitles) and obtain their soundtracks.

  • @Warp75
    @Warp75 Рік тому +1

    The first one I liked was Bartok’s Bluebeard’s Castle, It’s only a hour long & it’s dark.
    I then moved on to Les Troyens by Berlioz which is 4 hours.

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому +1

      I’ve been an opera fan since 1973, and have now seen 300+ performances onstage around the world. And yet, I first saw Les Troyens only ten years ago. I thought, where has this masterpiece been all my life?! It really is one of the great monuments of western art. But I definitely wouldn’t recommend it to a beginner. I mean, even Berlioz never saw an entire performance!

  • @teacherlee3102
    @teacherlee3102 3 місяці тому

    I saw both Barber of Seville and Zauberflote as my first operas and they were poorly done and I did NOT enjoy them, though I do now. The opera that got me hooked was a student production, with no sets at all, of Don Giovanni. I think was the heightened emotion of all the characters that drew me in; whereas the comedy of Barber of Seville didn't attract me and the oddball plot of Zauberflote didn't interest me either.

  • @dion1949
    @dion1949 11 днів тому

    As a first exposure to an opera, do you recommend a traditional staging or an updated one? Personally, I prefer a traditional one.

  • @EricMontreal22
    @EricMontreal22 Місяць тому

    A pretty ideal list I think. You do mention that Magic Flute has dialogue which can be easier for people new to opera--but many productions of Carmen do as well (in fact I've seen it live more often with the original spoken dialogue than the recitative added after Bizet)--Sondheim himself, who seemed to have a weird love/hate relationship with opera, called Carmen a "song opera" that plays a lot like modern musicals in its original version (his personal favourite Porgy and Bess, another good introduction to opera although perhaps a bit controversial, also fits that category despite originally having recitative that in various productions has been changed to dialogue.)

  • @cbungaro
    @cbungaro 8 місяців тому

    I agree with La Boheme, La Traviata and Barber of Seville, but not Magic Flute or Carmen, as much as I personally love both and concur that they have recognizable music. The problem I have found with both of them for first-time opera goers is that they are too long. I would substitute Tosca and Rigoletto. Just my opinion, but think both are more “manageable” for beginners. And while Barber is longish, it’s a comedy that just seems to move along more quickly.

  • @bilgiveeglencedunyasi9000
    @bilgiveeglencedunyasi9000 7 місяців тому

    Shafiga Akhundova was a prominent Azerbaijani composer, the first professional female author of an opera in the East

  • @annalazzari1633
    @annalazzari1633 27 днів тому

    Puccini's Gianni Schicchi is perfect for beginners. Short (1 act) and funny.

  • @triciadawnreynolds9498
    @triciadawnreynolds9498 Рік тому +2

    These videos are such great resource material for me as a Music Teacher hoping to teach kids to love and appreciate all kinds of music. The kids love the content and I am learning quite a lot too! Thank you!

  • @LorenzKerscher
    @LorenzKerscher 2 місяці тому

    Smetana's Bartered Bride could be added to the list. Recently this was performed in Munich in German translation as a high speed comedy and the audience was enthusiastic.

  • @geekbaritone
    @geekbaritone 10 місяців тому

    Whatever you do, don't go watch La Bohem if Jonas Kaufman is playing the role of Rodolfo. Please fix the way you say Habanera, it is not Habañera. Diana Damrau is not the best example for the role of The Queen of the Night.

  • @suzannedowling3576
    @suzannedowling3576 11 днів тому

    The comments "no dead space" in the operas and comparing time spent at an opera to Hamilton is ridiculous - more substance please!

  • @patrikforsman1516
    @patrikforsman1516 Рік тому +1

    The first list that i agree with. Like to add two if performed well might be on this list. L'elisir d'amore by Donizetti has a really nice tempo, not unlike The magic flute, and it's quite funny aswell. Les contes d'hoffman because of the surreal story wich in the hands of a good director can be really special, and the hitparade. Kleinzack, le barcarole, Olympias aria, Antonias aria, the diamond aria and a lot more good music, fairly easy listening.

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому

      Hoffmann is a GREAT opera, but underrated. The only reason I wouldn’t recommend it to beginners is that it’s very long, especially in the latest editions.

  • @brianshoman1723
    @brianshoman1723 Рік тому +1

    The 70's TV show "Gilligan's Island" had an episode where they transformed Shakespeare's "Hamlet" into a musical with the music from "Carmen".

  • @aaguero
    @aaguero 7 місяців тому +1

    My first exposure to opera was "Rigoletto," which I saw when I was 16 years old. It took my breath away and made me an inveterate opera lover for life! That was 40 years ago, and over time I've developed a love for Baroque opera. I recently also discovered Philip Glass through his opera "Akhenaten," and was entranced. The journey never ends - there is a world of operatic delights out there!

  • @JohnSmith-zq9mo
    @JohnSmith-zq9mo 9 місяців тому

    I feel that Barber of Seville is not more accessible than many Mozart operas. I would go with L'elisir d'amore instead.

  • @rogerhardy6306
    @rogerhardy6306 Рік тому +1

    Thanks! Great video and good advice although I've rarely managed to get any of my friends or partners into opera. I think I'd have added Cavalleria Rusticana or Pagliacci instead of the Rossini but that's just me. Brevity is probably an advantage for beginners and the Barber of Seville is really a bit long, even for me.

  • @andybaker2395
    @andybaker2395 Рік тому

    Good choices though consider Rigoletto over La Traviata owing to more and better (almost but not melodrama if directed and acted sincerely) drama and more well known(more hummable? 😊) arias, duets and the ensembles

  • @Realalbertcrowley
    @Realalbertcrowley 3 місяці тому

    The first and fourth opera got my attention love the voices but the others just seemed pretty awful at least to me but of course we've all heard the fifth opera especially if you grew up watching tom and Jerry and yes I did find it funny but not interesting

  • @brucealanwilson4121
    @brucealanwilson4121 8 місяців тому

    For a child or adult, I'd suggest HANSL & GRETL or LA CENTAROLA.

  • @CurtisKeyser
    @CurtisKeyser 7 місяців тому

    My 5 operas for beginners.
    1. Carmen
    2. Turandot
    3. La Traviata
    4. Madama Butterfly
    5. Cavalleria Rusticana

  • @shelleywalsh1500
    @shelleywalsh1500 5 місяців тому

    I would have included Die Fledermaus, simply for its sensual value and all that waltz music.

  • @hoot2416
    @hoot2416 5 місяців тому

    Diana Damrau's Queen of the The Night is, IMO, the greatest of all time.

  • @joeherald7319
    @joeherald7319 Рік тому +1

    Kudos for this. Good job for those us (like me) trying to learn about opera. La Boehme is the easiest for us. Real people, no dragons, demons, executions, curses, spells or poison. Just four guys, like we all may know, and the women in their lives. Kudos also for the Roy-G-Biv bookshelf arrangement.

  • @dion1949
    @dion1949 11 днів тому

    Carmen plays with men because she sees right through them.

  • @SARAWATINE-wo2jb
    @SARAWATINE-wo2jb Місяць тому

    Here from PENTHOUSE KDRAMA ❤

  • @DarlingMartyr
    @DarlingMartyr Рік тому +1

    I had my first introduction to Opera a couple of days ago: Dvorak’s Jacobin. It was so lovely.

  • @_MrPinto
    @_MrPinto 5 місяців тому

    My personal favorite is I pagliacci that’s a very solid one to start on too for plot and music

  • @ovh992
    @ovh992 2 роки тому +1

    Watch the movie AMADEUS with Tom Hulce about Mozart. This movie explains classical music and opera perfectly. After watching this movie, I promise you, you will appreciate opera so much more. And of course it has a scene on the amazing Magic Flute / Queen of the Night aria!

  • @btat16
    @btat16 3 роки тому +9

    The Vivaldi operas are also full of energy and lovely, but I can definitely see why you chose these for your top 5!

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  3 роки тому +1

      Vivaldi definitely has its own special electricity.

  • @mikebrossiart2872
    @mikebrossiart2872 2 місяці тому

    Ok dosnt exist eny easy song for tennors 😂😂😂😂 lets try vaccai

  • @loudspeakers3469
    @loudspeakers3469 2 роки тому +1

    Nice video. I have watched all of them except Il Barbiere di Siviglia. I agree though, great choices!

  • @LuisSierra147
    @LuisSierra147 2 роки тому +1

    Other strong point for Zauberflöte and Carmen as Opera for beginners is that they have spoken dialogue (For Carmen only if you're watching Bizet's original version)

  • @sandradiaz4366
    @sandradiaz4366 3 місяці тому

    I always tell people to start with the operas Mozart wrote with Lorenzo da Ponte--Le Nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Cosi Fan Tutte. Should dispel the notion that Wagnerian screaming is all there is to opera.

  • @johnbrock5633
    @johnbrock5633 Рік тому +1

    Couldn't agree more about Boheme, Carmen & The Barber, but for my Mozart I'd sub Il Seraglio for Magic Flute. And you've left out THE ABSOLUTE BEST 'first-time' opera, which is Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel! (I'd probably try to get Gluck's Orfeo in there somewhere, too - tho' Offenbach's take on the same story might possibly be more fun...) And if you're talking opera for beginners, what about G & S ??

    • @godehardbrysch7905
      @godehardbrysch7905 Рік тому

      Good evening John, greetings from Cologne where Jacques Offenbach was born, not far away from Bonn, Beethoven's birthplace (opera: Fidelio) and Siegburg (Google Earth), the birthplace of Engelbert Humperdinck.
      First I intended my comment to be addressed to "Classical Music" but we two have something in common.
      The word "Beginner" is a bit crucial and leads to subjectivity. But I think "classical Music" knows much better what a beginner is than many experts on YT.
      Maybe we Europeans, some speak several languages, can find more examples.
      However, the choices have nothing to do with the German language.
      1. Zar und Zimmermann by Lortzing (with the famous clog dance), on YT
      2. Der Freischütz by Carl Marian von Weber (advantage: All major motifs appear in the ouverture) on YT
      3. The abduction from the Seraglio (Die Entführung aus dem Serail, plays an importantpart in the award winning film AMADEUS) on YT
      4. The Magic Flute (extraordinary, Classical Music is right, the plot is quite confusing,) on YT
      5. Rigoletto (it's heartbreaking how Gilda dies - on YT.
      Maybe in some months my list will be altered, in discussions with beginners it has always been the same. All love Die Zauberflöte.
      To remember me, watch "Brüderchen komm tanz mit mir" (Guberova - Fassbender) - When Hänsel Gretel is performed there are always crowds of children in the audience, however, it is not an opera for children basically.

  • @1967AJB
    @1967AJB 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much, I’ve been hoping to find this kind of information for years, but didn’t know where to look. Brilliant, subscribed.

  • @myrnahuichapan7624
    @myrnahuichapan7624 13 днів тому

    A good opera singer does not need a microphone.

  • @ricardoyupanqui806
    @ricardoyupanqui806 2 роки тому +2

    La primera ópera que de Richard Wajner vi completa (video) fue "Lohengrin" de Richard Wagner. Y he seguido viendo más y más. Gracias por compartir.

    • @lefinlay
      @lefinlay Рік тому

      My first ever opera was also Lohengrin!

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому +1

      I love Wagner’s operas. Yes, even Parsifal, Tristan, and Meistersinger. But I surely wouldn’t recommend one of them to a beginner. No, not even Lohengrin.

  • @derbroier8235
    @derbroier8235 Рік тому

    You didn't get the plot of "The Magic Flute" :*

  • @jorgaba2865
    @jorgaba2865 2 роки тому +1

    I saw this vid and wondered if you would recommend the same 5 that I would...and you did, exactly!

  • @perfectblue8443
    @perfectblue8443 7 місяців тому +1

    I recommand L'enfant et les sortilèges

    • @diesalonniere7227
      @diesalonniere7227 4 місяці тому +1

      Absolutely! I also think that French opera, or music theatre, respectively, with their great ballet music and sound effects are underestimated: from Lully's Le Bourgeois gentilhomme and Rameau's Les Indes galantes or Platée to Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots and Berlioz' Les Troyens to Ravel's L'enfant et les sortilèges and Honegger's Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher.
      Though the length of the Baroque tragédie en musique or the Romantic grand opéra might be challenging for newbies, I'm convinced that a great mise-en-scène and, most of all, a vivid musical interpretation will not fail to make an impact.

  • @fredobatista4367
    @fredobatista4367 Рік тому +1

    💚🎶🌟

  • @Tom-pw2ni
    @Tom-pw2ni 2 місяці тому

    good first choices for beginners

  • @JWP452
    @JWP452 Рік тому

    Gotterdammerung, run time a brief six hours, hit tunes cascade out of the orchestra, the collapse of the gods, destruction the world followed by the ascent of man make for quite an evening.

    • @wotan10950
      @wotan10950 Рік тому

      I would worry about my continued safety if I recommended Gotterdammerung to a beginner. I’m sure you’re kidding, yes?

  • @thaliart
    @thaliart 2 місяці тому

    You had me at "villain"

  • @WilsonWatt-q2e
    @WilsonWatt-q2e 10 місяців тому

    My first was Rigoletto with Rena ta Scotto in the role of Gilda in 1966 when she such a glorious lyric voice. Your selections are certainly rational and reasonable. I little story about Jonas Kaufman here. I have a very good friend who over the years had listened to me rave about various operas I had seen and the great singers. Although she liked classical music, she never understood my opera passion. One time I visited her, I had a Kaufman CD in the car radio and had forgotten to turn it off. When I started the car the CD started playing and she said "take to Borders so I can buy my own copy of that.

  • @jamesbrianengay3010
    @jamesbrianengay3010 2 роки тому +1

    The Magic Flute is my first opera 😊

  • @yonekosirchio2637
    @yonekosirchio2637 9 місяців тому

    This is a great video. I actually came here because I was trying to find out which operas are good for beginner artists. I'm writing a story where the protagonist is a soprano, but I only know the opera world from the perspective of a listener and I have no idea of which operas would work best for debut/early career. Can anybody give me some advice?

    • @diesalonniere7227
      @diesalonniere7227 4 місяці тому +1

      Have a look at some sopranos' CVs. This might be insightful.
      I guess Gilda and Pamina are quite common. Also Gretel or Sandmännchen. It depends on the kind of voice ("fach"). Be careful to not mix them up in your story. The fach might change over the years, but a singer sticks to one for a couple of years and also gets her theatre engagements according to it.

    • @yonekosirchio2637
      @yonekosirchio2637 4 місяці тому

      @@diesalonniere7227 thank you so much, I didn't think about looking at CVs and it's the best solution. The story has already been written and edited, soon it's going to be published in a magazine. I omitted mentioning the debut roles of the protagonist, but next time I'll have more reference🙏

  • @guidoroemer81
    @guidoroemer81 3 роки тому +1

    I Agree 5 great opera's I Would have added Wagner's Fliegende Hollander and Skipped Rossini

  • @fabitocreativito432
    @fabitocreativito432 Рік тому

    why is queen of the night here 💀

  • @lilliedoubleyou3865
    @lilliedoubleyou3865 Рік тому

    Die Zauberflote is a great choice for beginners, along with La Boheme and Turandot (Puccini), the Ring Cycle and The Flying Dutchman (Wagner), The Barber of Seville (Rossini), and some fun Russian operas for extra measure: Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov and Glinka's Ruslan & Lyudmila. I don't agree that Mozart's other operas would be inappropriate choices, and I actually think The Marriage of Figaro & Don Giovanni would be great beginner operas, the latter especially for its entertainment value.
    Although strongly disagree that Die Zauberflote doesn't have a great story - it's one of the few "plot-driven" operas, rather than character-driven, and the weird but engaging (and philosophical) plot is one of the things I've always liked about it.
    P.S. my first opera was "Das Rheingold."

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 Рік тому

    My first ever opera, if you don't count the hundreds of times I've listened to just the overture by itself(in which case The Marriage of Figaro would technically be my first even though for over a decade, it was just the overture I was hearing), was not by any of the composers on this list. And, it wasn't even by a composer I had much exposure to. It was so long that I had to split up the opera into a few listening sessions. I'm sure that I pretty much gave the composer away with that last one, but in case I didn't, it is Wagner, specifically Das Rheingold.
    And then, no opera exposure for many years afterwards. Then, one time, somebody recommended me Fidelio because they knew that 1) I wanted to listen to more opera and 2) that I really love Beethoven's music. This was back in 2020. And, I loved how dramatic the opera was, like, I was expecting like Beethoven's Fifth Symphony level drama and Fidelio was like next level from that. But in my opinion, it had no real memorable melodies to speak of, not the overture, not the arias.
    And then came a spurt of opera listening soon afterwards. Well, I say spurt, but it was like 1 listening session of 1 full opera a month for 3 months. And these operas were all somewhat familiar to me, especially their overtures, which I have heard since I was a little kid just starting to get into classical music and really falling in love with it. Especially one particular composer, who I still very much love today and who brings me this sense of childhood nostalgia. I bet you probably already guessed that I'm talking about Mozart based on the childhood love of classical and the sense of nostalgia.
    But yeah, in 2021, I had a Mozart opera spurt. January, The Magic Flute. February, The Marriage of Figaro. March, Don Giovanni. I loved all of them, though I think I'd have to say The Marriage of Figaro if I had to pick the Mozart opera I loved the most. It's the one I had more overture exposure for. Like, I had been hearing the overture to The Marriage of Figaro for much longer than either the overture to The Magic Flute or the overture to Don Giovanni.
    And it's the one where I immediately had a melody from it stuck in my head after the opera was over. That didn't happen with The Magic Flute or Don Giovanni, I didn't like hum an aria or whatever after those 2 operas were over. But with The Marriage of Figaro, I had the Non piu andrai aria stuck in my head after the whole opera was over. And, I just found everything in The Marriage of Figaro so catchy that I didn't even notice the fact that it was 3 hours long, I was just enjoying the music and the acting.

  • @Altonahh10
    @Altonahh10 Рік тому

    I think it's all a matter of taste. If my first opera had been The Magic Flute, I would never have gone to the opera again. A good friend of mine went with me to Jenufa - and it was actually his first opera. Another was absolutely amazed by Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk and then totally bored by Turandot. And neither of them likes La Bohème, but Tosca and especially Verdi's Rigoletto.

  • @PaulineKatz-t1u
    @PaulineKatz-t1u Рік тому

    wonderful choices. Might have added Cavalleria Rusticana. Lush, breathtaking music. And also, Gianni schicci for fun and of course that wonderful aria.

  • @guygalt1102
    @guygalt1102 Рік тому

    Good selection. By purest chance, I'm going to see The Barber of Seville AND La bohème AND Handel's Julius Caesar - on 3 consecutive days next June 2024 in St. Louis. Was just there for Così fan tutte and Joplin's Treemonisha. Fantastic venue - not a bad seat in the house that I could see. I know this is a controversial subject, but they also do all of their operas in English, which is useful for a beginner. I especially look forward to seeing these after your recommendations! 😎

  • @LuisSierra147
    @LuisSierra147 2 роки тому +1

    Other strong point for Zauberflöte and Carmen as Opera for beginners is that they have spoken dialogue (For Carmen only if you're watching Bizet's original version)

    • @KeepitClassical
      @KeepitClassical  2 роки тому +2

      I completely agree!

    • @ikey14
      @ikey14 4 місяці тому

      Interesting. For a long time I didn’t want to see anything that DID contain spoken dialogue - it always seemed to break the mood

  • @johnhickey4784
    @johnhickey4784 Рік тому

    The first opera I saw was Madama Butterfly in in 1984 in Leningrad as St. Petersburg was then. From that time on i loved opera.

  • @TheJPCatholic
    @TheJPCatholic Рік тому

    I would agree with Die Zauberflöte and Bohémè for sure, but Hänsel und Gretel is another choice that sadly is left out (I believe it’s performed more than Zauberflöte in Germany). It’s fast, relaxing and familiar all at the same time. L’elisir definitely is another one that should be at least in the top 10 because it’s extremely funny and not that hard to follow. I’m surprised Rigoletto has not been mentioned simply because it’s plot is more or less simple, still Verdi, and very recognizable songs.