Birth The world's first opera was
Dafne by
Jacopo Peri, which appeared in
Florence in 1598. Three decades later
Heinrich Schütz set the same
libretto in a translation by the poet
Martin Opitz, thus creating the first ever German-language opera. The music to Schütz's
Dafne is now lost and details of the performance are sketchy, but it is known to have been written to celebrate the marriage of Landgrave Georg II of
Hessen-Darmstadt to Princess Sophia Eleonora of
Saxony in
Torgau in 1627. As in Italy, the first patrons of opera in Germany and Austria were royalty and the nobility, and they tended to favour composers and singers from south of the Alps.
Antonio Cesti was particularly successful, providing the huge operatic extravaganza ''
Il pomo d'oro for the imperial court in Vienna in 1668. Opera in Italian would continue to exercise a considerable sway over German-speaking lands throughout the Baroque and Classical periods. Nevertheless, native forms were developing too. In Nuremberg in 1644, Sigmund Staden produced the "spiritual pastorale", Seelewig, which foreshadows the Singspiel, a genre of German-language opera in which arias alternate with spoken dialogue. Seelewig'' was a moral allegory inspired by the example of contemporary school dramas and is the first German opera whose music has survived.
Hamburg 1678–1738 Another important development was the founding of the
Theater am Gänsemarkt in
Hamburg in 1678, aimed at the local middle classes who preferred opera in their own language. The new opera house opened with a performance of
Johann Theile's
Der erschaffene, gefallene und aufgerichtete Mensch, based on the story of
Adam and Eve. The theatre, however, would come to be dominated by the works of
Reinhard Keiser, an enormously prolific composer who wrote over a hundred operas, sixty of them for Hamburg. Initially, the works performed in Hamburg had all been on religious themes in an attempt to ward off criticisms by
Pietist church authorities that the theatre was immoral, but Keiser and fellow composers such as
Johann Mattheson broadened the range of subject matter to include the historical and the mythological. Keiser drew on foreign operatic traditions, for instance he included dances after the model of the French tradition of
Lully. The
recitative in his operas was always in German so the audience could follow the plot, but from
Claudius in 1703 he began to include arias in Italian which allowed for florid vocal display. The hallmark of the Hamburg style was its eclecticism.
Orpheus (1726) by
Telemann contains arias in Italian setting texts taken from famous
Handel operas as well as choruses in French to words originally set by Lully. Hamburg opera might also include comic characters (Keiser's
Der Carneval von Venedig of 1707 has them speaking in the local Lower Saxon dialect), marking a great contrast to the elevated new style of
opera seria as defined by
Metastasio. Yet the immediate future belonged to Italian opera. The most famous German-born opera composer of the era, Handel, wrote four operas for Hamburg at the beginning of his career but soon moved on to write opera seria in Italy and England. In 1738, the Theater am Gänsemarkt went bankrupt and the fortunes of serious opera in German went into decline for the next few decades. Other early opera houses in Germany included the
Oper am Brühl in
Leipzig and the
Opernhaus vorm Salztor in
Naumburg in 1701. Both played during the trade fairs in the towns, presenting both German and Italian opera, and a combination of both. While the house in Leipzig was financed by the town of Leipzig, the house in Naumburg was initiated and supported by the ruler,
Moritz Wilhelm, Duke of Saxe-Zeitz, but offered public performances.
Opera seria, Singspiel, melodrama, early serious German opera , a major promoter of German opera who pioneered serious German opera in the 1770s The other leading German composers of the time tended to follow Handel's example. This was because the courts of the various German states favoured opera in Italian. In 1730 the chief proponent of opera seria, the Italian librettist
Metastasio, took up residence as the imperial poet in Vienna.
Johann Adolph Hasse wrote operas in Italian for the court of the Elector of
Saxony in
Dresden. Hasse also wrote operas for the court of
Frederick the Great in Berlin, as did
Carl Heinrich Graun. The king himself supplied the libretto for Graun's
Montezuma, first performed in 1755. Deprived of aristocratic patronage until the mid-1770s, opera in German was forced to look to the general public to survive. This meant theatrical companies had to tour from town to town. The
Singspiel became the most popular form of German opera, especially in the hands of the composer
Johann Adam Hiller. Hiller's 1766 reworking of the
Singspiel Die verwandelten Weiber was a landmark in the history of the genre, although his most famous work would be
Die Jagd (1770). These
Singspiele were comedies mixing spoken dialogue and singing, influenced by the similar genres of the
ballad opera in England and the
opéra comique in France. Often having sentimental plots and extremely simple music,
Singspiele were no match for contemporary opera serias in artistic sophistication. The 1770s marked an important decade in the history of German-language opera. The theatre company of
Abel Seyler pioneered serious German-language opera, and Seyler commissioned operas by Hiller,
Georg Benda,
Anton Schweitzer and other composers. A milestone of German opera was
Anton Schweitzer's
Alceste, with a libretto by
Wieland and commissioned by Seyler, which premiered in 1773 in
Weimar.
Alceste was called "a model for German opera" by
Ernst Christoph Dressler and has been described as the first serious German opera. It was also in the 1770s that composers, like
Georg Benda, began experimenting with
melodrama, a type of music theatre which some commentators saw as a viable alternative to opera. Early melodramas that proved popular with theatre troupes throughout German-speaking Europe included Benda's
Ariadne auf Naxos and
Medea (both premiered in 1775). Other important contributions to a growing repertoire of German operas appeared shortly after. This includes
Günther von Schwarzburg, a through-composed opera noted then as now for its topic taken from German history, by composer
Ignaz Holzbauer and librettist Anton Klein which premiered in 1777. An increasing amount of operas originally set to Italian and French texts by composers like
André Ernest Modeste Grétry were translated and adopted for performance in German. By the end of the decade, German opera could be heard throughout Central Europe owing in part to travelling theatres and German states that began supporting
Nationaltheater that further developed the repertoire, such as those founded in
Mannheim and Vienna. Alongside those already mentioned above, notable composers of German-language opera from the 1770s and 1780s include
Johann André,
Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf,
Christian Gottlob Neefe,
Ignaz Umlauf, and
Ernst Wilhelm Wolf. With successful works that appeared on stages across Germany, like
Der Doktor und Apotheker, Ditters was a particularly successful composer of German opera between the mid-1780s and mid-1790s. ==Classical era==