Frances Minto Dickinson Elliot in Granada

from Memoir of Frances Minto Dickinson Elliot, Chapter 14, page 258:

As to the Zarzuela (opera comique) ... music generally imported, becomes, by an easy process, Spanish at the frontier. I was informed the other night, that `La prova di un opera seria,' called here `Campanone' was Spanish, and (oh shade of Rossini!) that the `Barber of Seville' was Spanish music arranged by an Italian! And (en parenthèse) what a treat to listen to these thrilling Italian notes, and that true voice of melody in which they speak, after the inanities to which I have been accustomed by national composers, ignorant of what true music means.
cite as

Memoir of Frances Minto Dickinson Elliot, Chapter 14. In Frances Minto Dickinson Elliot, Diary of an Idle Woman in Spain, p. 258. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1378303657 accessed: 20 April, 2024 (British and Irish Women's Letters and Diaries 1500-1950)

location of experience: Granada

Listeners

Listening to

hide composers
The Barber of Seville
written by Rossini

Experience Information

Medium live
Listening Environment in the company of others, indoors, in public

Originally submitted by hgb3 on Wed, 04 Sep 2013 15:07:37 +0100