By Freya Parr

Published: Tuesday, 27 February 2024 at 16:43 PM


Many composers have turned their hand to opera, from Handel to Kanye West. But who are the composers who have shaped this theatrical form into what it is today?

Originating in Italy at the end of the 16th century, opera has attracted composers from all styles and backgrounds. Although Italy remained the epicentre of the European opera world for quite some time, there have always been composers in other countries making waves: Schütz in Germany, Lully in France, Purcell in Britain and, more recently, Missy Mazzolli, Philip Glass and John Adams in the US.

While this may not be an exhaustive list of the greatest opera composers, it is a good place to start for those who are new to the art form.

Please note: this list has been compiled in no particular order.

Wagner

Richard Wagner (1813-1883) truly was opera’s colossus, revolutionising the form and popularising the use of leitmotifs – musical phrases corresponding to specific characters – in operas of the 19th century.

His Ring Cycle perfectly indicates his grasp of the form, made up of four full-length operas – a cycle of unprecedented scale and grandeur. Its four comprising operas are Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, Siegfried and Götterdämmerung, and are intended to be heard in a series. Its opening opera, Das Rheingold, is, at two and a half hours, the longest single stretch of unbroken music in the classical music canon.

Later in his life, he founded the Bayreuth Festival, his very own opera gala. The festival provided a platform for Wagner to showcase his own works, including The Ring Cycle and Parsifal.

Which operas did Wagner compose?

Die FeenDas LiebesverbotRienziDer fliegende HöllanderTannhäuserLohengrinDas RheingoldDie WalküreSiegfriedGötterdämmerungTristan und IsoldeDie MeistersingerParsifal

Read more reviews of the latest Wagner recordings here

Find out more about Wagner and his works here

We named Wagner one of the greatest composers ever

Puccini

Puccini is the founding father of Italian opera, whose music has stood the test of time. How many times have we heard ‘O mio babbino caro’ from Gianni Schicchi or seen various adaptations of La boheme performed on stages across the world?

Certainly, there’s something questionable about the way Puccini and his librettists treat women, with many of his female protagonists taking their own lives, but elsewhere in his operas he touches on progressive subjects such as cultural imperialism.

Which operas did Puccini compose?

Le VilliEdgarManon LescautLa BohèmeToscaMadama ButterflyLa fanciulla del WestLa RondineIl tritticoIl tabarroSuor AngelicaGianni SchicchiTurandot

Find out more about Puccini and his works here

Read our reviews of the latest Puccini recordings here

Britten

The operas of Benjamin Britten manage to straddle traditional and avant-garde soundworlds and appeal to a wide variety of audiences. After giving the US premiere of Paul Bunyan, written to a libretto by WH Auden, the pair withdrew the opera – despite its deft use of American musical, country and blues idioms.

The premiere of Peter Grimes secured Britten a place on the international opera stage, and from then, Britten was able to flex his operatic muscles and wrote a tranche of stellar works for the stage. He has emerged as one of the major figures of 20th-century opera.

Which operas did Britten compose?

Paul BunyanPeter GrimesThe Rape of LucretiaAlbert HerringThe Beggar’s OperaBilly BuddGlorianaThe Turn of the ScrewNoye’s FluddeA Midsummer Night’s DreamCurlew RiverThe Burning Fiery FurnaceThe Prodigal SonOwen WingraveDeath in Venice

Find out more about Britten and his works here

Read our reviews of the latest Britten recordings here

Kaija Saariaho

Kaija Saariaho’s first opera L’Amour de loin is dark, brooding and already a mainstay of the European opera scene since it was first performed in 2000. It was given its debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 2016 and became the first ever opera by a female composer and conducted by a female composer (Susanna Mälkki) to be broadcast to cinemas across the world as part of the Metropolitan Opera Live in HD series. The opera is based on the story of Jaufre Rudel, Prince of Blaye, one of the first great troubadours of the 12th century.

Which operas has Kaija Saariaho composed?

L’amour de loinAdriana MaterÉmilie

Read our reviews of the latest Saariaho recordings here

Thomas Adès

Thomas Adès leapt to global fame in 1995 following the premiere of his first opera Powder Her Face, written for four singers and chamber orchestra. It is about a beautiful but promiscuous woman who is disgraced during her divorce, and is seen as one of the earliest operas about tabloid culture and cancel culture.

The Tempest and The Exterminating Angel are similarly dramatic, both of which are adaptations: The Tempest of Shakespeare’s play of the same name and The Exterminating Angel an adaptation of the 1962 film by Luis Buñuel.

Which operas has Thomas Adès composed?

Powder Her FaceThe TempestThe Exterminating Angel

Read our reviews of the latest Thomas Adès recordings here

Handel

Handel was a master of opera and oratorio, having started writing and directing his own operas at the age of just 20. As a young man, he went to Italy – the home of opera – to seek patronage and learn from the great composers of the time. It was here he penned such operas as Rodrigo and Agrippina, both of which are still commonly performed and recorded across the world. He later left Italy for London where he wrote a further 30 operas.

Because of his comparatively long life, his output was vast and the operatic masterpieces were spread evenly across his life. In the 1730s he split his time evenly between writing operas an oratorios, such as Esther and Acis and Galatea.

Which operas has Handel composed?

AlmiraNeroFlorindoDaphneRodrigoAgrippinaRinaldoIl pastor fidoTeseoSillaAmadigi di GaulaRadamistoMuzio ScevolaFloridanteOttoneFlavioGiulio CesareTamerlanoRodelindaSciopioneAlessandroAdmetoRiccardo PrimoSiroeTolomeoLotarioPartenopePoroEzioSosarmeOrlandoArianna in CretaOresteAriodanteAlcinaAtalantaArminioGiustinoBereniceFaramondoAlessandro SeveroSerseGiove in ArgoImeneoDeidamiaAcis and Galatea

Read our reviews of the latest Handel recordings here

Find out more about Handel and his works here

Ethel Smyth

In her lifetime, The Boatswain’s Mate was Ethel Smyth‘s most successful opera. The comic two-act opera features the theme that later became The March of the Women, the official anthem of the Women’s Social and Political Union and the broader women’s suffrage movement in 1911.

It is her earlier opera, however, that is most regularly performed nowadays. Thomas Beecham conducted the English premiere of The Wreckers in 1909 and it went on to receive a Covent Garden performance the year after. It’s a light opera – a label Smyth was proud of, believing English composers were well suited to the style. Mahler was believed to be interested in bringing it to the Vienna State Opera, but unfortunately got fired before he had the opportunity to do so.

Which operas did Ethel Smyth compose?

FantastioDer WaldThe WreckersThe Boatswain’s MateFête GalanteEntente Cordiale

Read our reviews of the latest Smyth recordings

Tchaikovsky

Tchaikovsky‘s compositional output is wide-ranging, encompassing ballets, songs, symphonies and, of course, operas. Despite Tchaikovsky’s hesitancy, concerned the public may not accept it, Eugene Onegin has become one of his most commonly performed operas. It is based on a novel by Alexander Pushkin, as are his later operas The Queen of Spades and Mazeppa.

We also named Tchaikovsky one of the greatest ballet composers ever

Which operas did Tchaikovsky compose?

UndinaThe VoyevodaThe OprichnikVakula the SmithEugene OneginThe Maid of OrleansMazeppaCherevichkiThe EnchantressThe Queen of SpadesIolanta

Find out more about Tchaikovsky and his works here

Read our reviews of the latest Tchaikovski recordings here

Missy Mazzoli

In 2018, Missy Mazzoli made history when she became one of the first two women (along with Jeanine Tesori) to be commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera. She has chosen to base her Met Opera commission on George Saunders’s 2017 novel Lincoln in the Bardo. BBC Music Magazine‘s columnist referred to Mazzoli as ‘writing in a lush, neo-Romantic style spiced with minimalist and jazz flecks.’

Her most recent opera, Proving Up, explores the dark realities of the American Dream, based on a story by the writer Karen Russell. ‘I wrote it right after the 2016 election when issues of inequality and access were being discussed more than ever – something that has only intensified in the last four years,’ Mazzolli told BBC Music Magazine in 2020. ‘Most of my operas so far have centred on women in impossible situations. Being a woman in a male-dominated field and struggling to carve out an identity is one of my big preoccupations.’

Which operas has Missy Mazzoli composed?

Song from the UproarBreaking the WavesProving Up

Read our reviews of Mazzoli recordings here

Verdi

Verdi dominated the world of Italian opera in the 19th century after the premiere of Nabucco took Milan by storm in 1842, following in the footsteps of Bellini, Donizetti and Rossini who came before. Even during his lifetime, Verdi’s operas were incredibly popular, performed across the world. His La traviata remains the most-performed opera in the world – despite having initially been viewed as something of a disappointment after the epic historic operas he had written before, Rigoletto and Il trovatore. Together, these three operas – written during his ‘middle period’ remain his best loved.

Which operas did Verdi compose?

Oberto, conte di San BonifacioUn giorno di regnoNabucodonosorI Lombardi alla prime crociataErnaniI due FoscariGiovanna d’ArcoAlziraAttilaMacbethI masnadieriIl corsaroLa battaglia di LegnanoLuisa MillerStiffelioRigolettoIl trovatoreLa traviataLes vêpres siciliennesSimon BoccanegraUn ballo in mascheraLa forza del destinoDon CarlosAidaOtelloFalstaff

Read our reviews of the latest Verdi recordings here

Find out more about Verdi and his works here

Mozart

By the age of 13, Mozart had already composed a short one-act opera: Bastien and Bastienne. From here, his ambitions and talents grew, thanks to several trips to Italy which helped hone his operatic skills and establish his reputation as an opera composer.

His sophisticated orchestral writing aided the creation of his operas, most of which are still readily performed today. The Marriage of Figaro is one such opera, the first collaboration between Mozart and the theatre poet Lorenzo da Ponte. They continued working together for several years, ending with Così fan tutte, their final opera together.

We named The Marriage of Figaro as the greatest opera of all time

Which operas did Mozart compose?

Apollo et HyacinthusBastien und BastienneLa finta sempliceMitridate, re di PontoAscanio in AlbaIl sogno di ScipioneLucio SillaLa finta giardinieraIl re pastoreThomas, König in ÄgyptenIdomeneo, re di CretaDie Entführung aus dem SerailDer SchauspieldirektorLe nozze di FigaroDon GiovanniCosí fan tutteLa clemenza di TitoDie Zauberflöte

Mark-Anthony Turnage

British composer Mark-Anthony Turnage has penned a number of operas, including a chamber opera, Country of the Blind. Taking inspiration from a wide variety of genres and styles, Turnage’s operas encompass eclectic soundworlds and explore complex and provocative subject matter.

The Silver Tassie is set in First World War Dublin and follows the life of a local footballer who becomes paralysed while fighting in the trenches, while Anna Nicole tells the story of the rise and demise of Playboy model Anna-Nicole Smith. Its 2013 premiere became the last work staged by the New York City Opera.

Read our reviews of the latest Turnage recordings here

Which operas has Mark-Anthony Turnage composed?

Twice Through the HeartGreekCountry of the BlindThe Silver TassieAnna NicolaCoraline

Monteverdi

Straddling the Renaissance and Baroque eras, Monteverdi was pioneering in the development of Italian opera and vocal music. Instrumental music also played a key role in his writing however, with strings dominating the orchestral accompaniment in operas such as Orfeo. This might be due to the fact that Monteverdi grew up in Cremona, home to the Amati family who manufactured top-quality violins and string instruments.

Although opera had already been developed by the time Monteverdi started writing, Orfeo is considered to be the first great masterpiece in Italian opera. He was pioneering with his later operas as well: L’incoronazione di Poppea (The Coronation of Poppaea) was the first known opera to be based on a factual historical subject, a trend that has continued throughout the course of operatic history.

Which operas did Monteverdi compose?

L’OrfeoL’AriannaLe nozze di TetideAndromedaArmida abbandonataLa finta pazza LicoriProserpina rapitaIl ritorno d’Ulisse in patriaLe nozze d’Enea con LaviniaL’incoronazione di Poppea

Read more reviews of the latest Monteverdi recordings here

Find out more about Monteverdi and his works

Janáček

There are few opera composers as wholly original as Janáček. Despite not getting round to writing his first major opera (Jenůfa) until middle age, he found his stride and completed many significant operas in the latter half of his life.

His operas are notable for their prominent use of Slavic folk music from his native Czech Republic. Like many Italian operas, his writing is full of heightened drama and complex, fleshed-out characters.

Which operas did Janácek compose?

ŠárkaThe Beginning of a RomanceJenůfaDestinyThe Excursions of Mr BroučekKát’a KabanováThe Cunning Little VixenThe Makropulos AffairFrom the House of the Dead

Read our reviews of the Janáček recordings here

Read our reviews of the latest opera recordings here