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give an example of a popular 18th century opera formSecond AnswerOpera seria (serious opera) and opera buffa (comic opera), also Singspiel, an opera with spoken dialogue.
19th century
The late eighteenth century
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Peter Gammond has written: 'The Oxford companion to popular music' 'The meaning and magic of music' 'The illustrated encyclopedia of opera' 'Bluff your way in opera' 'Offenbach' -- subject(s): Composers, Biography 'Music on record' 'A guide to popular music'
Classical describes music for solo instrument, symphonic, Opera and chamber music adhering to a homophonic style that was used in the latter 18th century and continuing on into the 19th century. It has lots of European tradition
Ellen Rosand has written: 'Eighteenth-And Nineteenth-Century Source Studies (Garland Library of the History of Western Music, Vol 8)' 'Opera in Seventeenth-Century Venice' -- subject(s): Opera 'Medieval Music I' 'Baroque Music II'
18th century dramatic Opera
No, opera is considered classical music.
Any performance that the Italian opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti starred in. That would include not just opera but popular music.
The Victorian era was between 1837 and 1901 when Queen Victoria reigned in Britain. Popular during that time was opera, comic opera, musical burlesque, musical comedy, and brass bands.
the year 1996, if you mean the web-browser named Opera.Second replyMusical Opera was created in Italy in the late-16th century. The first opera is generally thought to be Dafne, by Jacopo Peri. The music for this opera has been lost. The earliest opera for which we have the music and which receives occasional performances is L'Orfeo by Claudio Monteverdi, first performed in Mantua, Italy, in 1607.