Library/PT 151/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages say music shows emotions more clearly than words, so putting words to music can deepen feelings but also mixes two arts and can weaken each one’s purity. Opera usually depends mostly on music: some operas put music first, while others try to balance music, words, plot, and staging. To judge an opera you should look at how the music and words work together in each scene—good music should serve the drama and add what other parts don’t, and good words should let the music and staging do their job—because opera’s special power comes from how these elements are joined.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Find an issue both passages address — scan for statements about the role or importance of words/libretto in opera. Supporting quotes: Passage A: "an opera is largely independent of words, and depends for its aesthetic value not upon the poetry of the libretto ... but upon its emotional range—a region dominated by the musical element." Passage A also: "words are subordinated to the more expressive medium of music." Passage B: "neither the music nor the poetry of the libretto should be judged in isolation" and "the poetry is good ... if ... it furnishes opportunity for effective musical and scenic treatment."

Passage Stimulus

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15.

The authors of both passages attempt to answer which one of the following questions?

Correct Answer
D
Both passages focus on how important words (the libretto/poetry) are to the artistic effectiveness of opera. Passage A argues that opera "depends for its aesthetic value not upon the poetry of the libretto ... but upon its emotional range—a region dominated by the musical element," and says words should be "subordinated to the more expressive medium of music." Passage B treats the relation between music and poetry in opera (distinguishing types where music is primary or in parity with other factors) and insists that "neither the music nor the poetry of the libretto should be judged in isolation" and that poetry is good only insofar as it "furnishes opportunity for effective musical and scenic treatment." Together these passages address how important words are to opera's artistic effectiveness (D).
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