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  • Giacomo Meyerbeer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Giacomo Meyerbeer (September 5, 1791 – May 2, 1864) was a noted German-born opera composer, and the first great exponent of Grand Opera.

  • Meyerbeer Fan Club Home Page

    Detailed information about the life, music and opera of Giacomo Meyerbeer, including articles, discussion page and membership information

  • Who Is Meyerbeer?

    By 1815, the composer, now calling himself Giacomo Meyerbeer, began to compose Italian operas and other musical works. His first effort was a cantata for solo clarinet, orchestra ...

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Giacomo Meyerbeer

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Meyerbeer’s Les HuguenotsMeyerbeer’s Les Huguenots

Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791-1864), German composer, whose flair for the dramatic influenced the work of the German composer Richard Wagner. He was born Jakob Liebmann Beer in Berlin. His principal composition teacher was the German organist Abbé George Joseph Vogler. Meyerbeer went to Venice in 1815, where he adopted the tuneful manner of the Italian composer Gioacchino Rossini. Meyerbeer wrote six Italian-style operas, the most successful of which was Il Crociato in Egitto (The Crusader in Egypt, 1824). He then stopped composing, moved to Paris, and studied French opera, which differed from the Italian in its emphasis on lavish settings and ballets and in the predominance of choral and instrumental music over solo arias. It also treated more serious subjects, usually historical ones. In his final phase, Meyerbeer composed six French operas that established the grand-opera style and gained him fame throughout Europe. These include Robert le diable (Robert the Devil, 1831), Les Huguenots (1836), Le prophète (1849), and, in rehearsal at the time of his death, L'Africaine (1865).



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