Ballad
A ballad is a story in a song, usually a narrative song or poem. It is a rhythmic saga of a past affair, which may be heroic, romantic or satirical, political (affected by the previous three types mentioned, refers to either glorifying the exploits or causes of a particular leader or group, and is typical of totalitarian political systems), almost inevitably catastrophic, which is related in the third person, usually with foreshortened alternating four- and three-stress lines ('ballad meter') and simple repeating rhymes, and often with a refrain.
Ballad opera
A particularly English form, the ballad opera, has as its most famous example John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, which inspired the 20th-century cabaret operas of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill (q.v.). Ballad strophs usually alternate between iambic tetrameter and iambic pentameter, though this is not always the case.
Related Topics:
John Gay - The Beggar's Opera - Bertolt Brecht - Kurt Weill
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | Broadsheet ballads |
| ► | Border ballads |
| ► | Literary ballads |
| ► | Ballad opera |
| ► | Jazz ballad |
| ► | Power ballad |
| ► | Famous ballads |
| ► | External Resources |
| ► | See also |
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