

Ep. 13 Lakme by Delibes broadcast 10.22.17
01:57:45
Flower Duet's Popularity
- Delibes's Flower Duet is his most famous piece.
- British Airways even used it in a commercial.
Opéra-Comique Explained
- Lakmé premiered in Paris at the Opéra-Comique.
- Opéra-Comique features both singing and spoken dialogue.
Understanding Durga
- Durga is a warrior goddess and an aspect of Parvati.
- Parvati is the wife of Shiva, the destroyer god in Hinduism.
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Introduction
00:00 • 2min
OperaFern's Historical Expertise
01:53 • 2min
Locke May and Dorga
03:40 • 2min
The Hindu Deities
05:20 • 5min
The Flower Duet
10:30 • 2min
The Intoxicating Scent of Jasmine
12:09 • 16sec
Malika's Dham Abais
12:25 • 1min
The Flower Duet
13:37 • 6min
The Soprano Voices
19:22 • 2min
Rose and Frederick and Ellen and Gerald and Mrs. Benson
21:00 • 2min
The Luteur and the Luteur
23:25 • 3min
Le Merriage De Loti
26:44 • 3min
The Caste System in India
29:21 • 2min
Kung Fong Is Seizure Leave
31:32 • 5min
Gerald in l'Aqme by Leo De Leib
36:58 • 5min
Gerald.
41:57 • 2min
The Romantic Period
43:28 • 2min
The Enlightenment and the Arts
45:46 • 2min
The Lock Me Has Returned
47:26 • 1min
The Day Is Falling in the Rain
48:55 • 5min
Gerald and the Wall
54:10 • 49sec
Lock May by Leo De Leib
54:59 • 5min
The Importance of Being a Brahmin Princess
01:00:13 • 2min
The Overwhelmed Mrs. Benson
01:02:21 • 2min
The Barthanatyam
01:04:01 • 2min
Lachme's Daughter
01:05:36 • 2min
Lachme, Pundu, Regards of Wall
01:07:07 • 5min
The Legend of Nelekanth
01:12:02 • 2min
The Tale of a Hindu Maiden
01:14:22 • 4min
Arias From the Upper Lock May
01:18:44 • 1min
The Back of the New Sassif
01:19:57 • 6min
The Back of the New Sassif Lachme
01:25:35 • 2min
Dili's Song Reflects the Action of the Story
01:27:27 • 3min
L'achme, It Is You
01:30:33 • 5min
The Devotion of the Brahmins to Durga
01:35:36 • 4min
The Brahman Chorus Continues to Worship Durga
01:39:17 • 3min
Lock Me and Gerald in an Indian Forest
01:42:18 • 2min
Lock Me on Abra
01:44:18 • 4min
Lock Me and the Wounded Warrior
01:47:55 • 2min
Robin Hood and Frodo
01:49:34 • 3min
The Importance of Duty
01:52:18 • 2min
Lockmay and the Datora Flower in Lock May by Leo DeLeep
01:54:07 • 3min
In this episode of Opera for Everyone we listen to Lakme, an opera in three acts by Léo Delibes to a French libretto by Edmond Gondinet and Philippe Gille.
The score, written in 1881-2, was first performed on in 1883 by the Opéra-Comique in Paris. The story is set in British India in the mid-19th century, Lakmé is based on Théodore Pavie's story "Les babouches du Brahamane" and novel "Le Mariage de Loti" by Pierre Loti.
The opera includes the popular Flower Duet (Sous le dôme épais) performed in Act 1 by Lakmé, the daughter of a Brahmin priest, and her servant Mallika.
The name Lakmé is the French rendition of Sanskrit Lakshmi, the name of the Hindu Goddess of Wealth. The opera's most famous aria is the Bell Song (L'Air des clochettes) in Act 2.
Like other French operas of the period, Lakmé captures the ambience of the Orient seen through Western eyes, which was periodically in vogue during the latter part of the 19th century and in line with other operatic works such as Bizet's The Pearl Fishers and Massenet's Le roi de Lahore.[3] The subject of the opera was suggested by Gondinet as a vehicle for the American soprano Marie van Zandt.