As seen in the above clip, the opera flirts with social transgression despite the subtitle: La Cecchina, a sweet-tempered maidservant, is in love with a marquis. Shall their union be prevented by class boundaries? Fortunately not... as she turns out to be the daughter of a baron. Rousseau himself penned a musical drama entitled Le Devin du Village, extolling sentiment and simplicity. Gretry, meanwhile, was quoted with inflammatory effect at a military banquet, where an aria from Richard Coeur-de-Lion ("O Richard, o mon roi") was sung in commiseration with Louis XVI at "the universe being arrayed against him." And so, indeed, it might have seemed to be. The much-touted changes in mentality which facilitated the social revolutions of the end of the century find eloquent utterance in Mozart. After years of defying tyranny in opera seria, Mozart has Figaro kick over the cart, with a little help from Beaumarchais:
Then, of course, there is the rich and varied afterlife of the revolution in operas which have taken inspiration from its events. Reading about the social ambitions of the bourgeoisie, I kept being distracted from vigorous debates by having this scene playing in my head:
Another topic, vigorously debated both by revolutionaries and their historians--what is the "true revolution" and who are its supporters?--is distilled into Dvořák's opera The Jacobin. Domestic and political tyrannies are thwarted in this all's-well-that-ends-well comedy. A crusty old count is prevented from appointing a Machiavellian successor when he finds out that his son has remained loyal to his native land, and, far from being a Jacobin as suspected, was associated with the Girondins who opposed the Terror. The work is rarely performed, but due to appear at the Barbican this coming February. In this joyous finale, sentiment is seen to be a prerequisite for social justice, exercised benevolently on behalf of the peasants, who get to marry whom they wish.
Poulenc is, as far as I know, the only composer to incorporate the guillotine in his score. Dialogues des Carmelites is perhaps the bleakest treatment of the revolution, where anticipating the final resurrection is an acknowledgement that a sinful humanity is incapable of creating a regenerated society. I love Robert Carsen's staging of the final scene, but be warned: it chokes me up without fail:
Luigi Illica's libretto for Umberto Giordano's Andrea Chenier is steeped in revolutionary references, from the opening scene where the fashionable gathering tuts over the fall of Necker to the final one where the gaoler comments on the debased assignats which make him so happy to take Maddalena's hard cash. Chenier (described as an "insolent and violent poet" in the archives of the Paris police) is the ideal citizen of much political writing in the late 1700s and since: patriotic, principled, and romantic. Domingo's very human account of the heroic "Un dì all'azzurro spazio" can't be embedded, but it's worth listening to here.
Finally, we have revisionist history with a vengeance: John Corigliano's 1991 opera The Ghosts of Versailles. Here, the inimitable Teresa Stratas is the posthumously-depressed Marie Antoinette, seeking consolation from--of all people--Beaumarchais:
My beloved Fidelio has been consciously omitted from this list; all that liberty and romanticism does have a very post-revolutionary flavor, but I don't find the theory that it's directly related to the Marquis and Marquise de Lafayette very convincing. Still, I suspect I have not nearly exhausted the revolutionary histories of the operatic repertoire, so if you have further favorites, Gentle Readers, or thoughts on the works presented, comment away!