Top 40 Quotes & Sayings by Gian Carlo Menotti

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an Italian composer Gian Carlo Menotti.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Gian Carlo Menotti

Gian Carlo Menotti was an Italian-American composer, librettist, director, and playwright who is primarily known for his output of 25 operas. Although he often referred to himself as an American composer, he kept his Italian citizenship. One of the most frequently performed opera composers of the 20th century, his most successful works were written in the 1940s and 1950s. Highly influenced by Giacomo Puccini and Modest Mussorgsky, Menotti further developed the verismo tradition of opera in the post-World War II era. Rejecting atonality and the aesthetic of the Second Viennese School, Menotti's music is characterized by expressive lyricism which carefully sets language to natural rhythms in ways that highlight textual meaning and underscore dramatic intent.

A Schubert song, the A-major chord at the opening of Wagner's 'Lohengrin' - such incredible beauty is a mystery, the divinity of music.
God gives you the gift of melody or He doesn't - it's as simple as that.
Waiting and hoping are the whole of life, and as soon as a dream is realized it is destroyed. — © Gian Carlo Menotti
Waiting and hoping are the whole of life, and as soon as a dream is realized it is destroyed.
Fate has blessed me.
Writing beautiful melodies is not fashionable because it is very difficult to do.
I thought conceptual art was a joke.
I can sit on a chair with a score and give myself a wonderful performance.
I should have worked harder in my life. I suffer from a guilt complex.
I'm not very sympathetic to the tendency to bring art to the people.
There are three reasons why I live in Scotland. First, I like silence, and you have to be a millionaire to buy silence in Italy. Second, I like cold weather. Third, in Italy I have too many relatives and know too many people, so I never get a quiet time.
I have always felt that art, especially music, is but a demonstration of God.
My advice to composers is, 'Try to reach 90, and everyone will love you.'
Any subject is good for opera if the composer feels it so intently he must sing it out. — © Gian Carlo Menotti
Any subject is good for opera if the composer feels it so intently he must sing it out.
One lived in the impression that nobody could ever compete with the 'Nutcracker' or 'A Christmas Carol.'
I loathe my body. The liver spots, the sagging flesh.
I have the feeling that everybody was waiting for me to die so they could rediscover me. Then they found out I'm not dead yet, so they are rediscovering me while I'm still alive.
As a little boy of 3 or 4, I became lame. Something was wrong with my right leg. There are pictures of me being pulled around in a little wagon. The doctors didn't know what to do. So my nanny took me to the miraculous Madonna at Sacro Monte in Varese, the priest blessed me, and I walked.
Melody is a form of remembrance. It must have a quality of inevitability in our ears.
I really don't think I have that much of the gift; I have a little bit, but I wish I were Schubert or Chopin or Beethoven, though Beethoven had a very difficult time writing melody, too.
At the premieres, I always watch the audience. If a child asks to go to the bathroom, I know I've failed.
The Greeks said the artist doesn't actually have to travel and look around. You stay where God has put you, and you dig as deep as you can. This is what I've done.
The only thing that interests me in music is to be able to reach into the, let's call it, 'collective unconscious' of what is noblest in the human spirit, the way you find in the music of Mozart and Beethoven and Verdi that wonderful quality that not a note can be changed.
It was my contention that opera can not only pay for itself if it is well given, but it can also command a much wider audience if given like a play with lots of rehearsals and wonderful singers that fit the role.
I rebelled against the idea of the artist being what I call the 'after-dinner mint' of society. I didn't want them to be just the entertainers, but rather part of the community - the bread, not only the dessert.
Now, all of a sudden, every college and every university has an opera theater. Every little city has its little group.
For better or for worse, in 'The Last Savage,' I have dared to do away completely with fashionable dissonance, and in a modest way, I have endeavored to rediscover the nobility of gracefulness and the pleasure of sweetness.
Hell begins on the day when God grants us a clear vision of all that we might have achieved, of all the gifts which we have wasted, of all that we might have done which we did not do.
A man only becomes wise when he begins to calculate the approximate depth of his ignorance. — © Gian Carlo Menotti
A man only becomes wise when he begins to calculate the approximate depth of his ignorance.
I guess I am running the risk of becoming the Hans Christian Andersen of opera.
Art is the unceasing effort to compete with the beauty of flowers - and never succeeding.
I have a heart problem, so I have to simplify my life and be content with memories and friends and music.
It takes a Bobby White to make a tired 90-year-old composer write a song about love.
It's always what you did before. The year before is always so much better. Even when the critics hated what you did then, it always looks better five years later.
The Italians are very unmusical. If I go to a Protestant church in London or Amsterdam or listen to a black choir, I hear four-part harmony. Italians could never do that. In Italy, we all have to sing the melody because we cannot harmonise.
The creation of Spoleto was a social experiment. Because I've always suffered guilt from being a Catholic, when I was in my fifties I felt a need of being needed.
People ask me whether I'm religious. Well, in a certain way, I am.
Music is...a form of remembering, a return to the seasons of the heart long gone.
I know of no better definition of love than the one given by Proust - Love is space and time measured by the heart. — © Gian Carlo Menotti
I know of no better definition of love than the one given by Proust - Love is space and time measured by the heart.
Love, which, in concert with Abstinence, established Faith, and which, along with Patience, builds up Chastity, is like the columns that sustain the four corners of a house. For it was that same Love which planted a glorious garden redolent with precious herbs and noble flowers-roses and lilies-which breathed forth a wondrous fragrance, that garden on which the true Solomon was accustomed to feast his eyes.
Love is born of faith, lives on hope, and dies of charity.
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