Matthew Aucoin is an American composer, conductor, and writer. His operas have been commissioned and presented by the Metropolitan Opera, the Los Angeles Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and many other companies, and his instrumental music has been performed by Yo-Yo Ma, the Brentano Quartet, and other artists. He is a cofounder of the American Modern Opera Company (AMOC) and was the Los Angeles Opera's artist in residence from 2016 to 2020. He is a 2018 MacArthur Fellow.
Named a Best Book of the Year by The Wall Street Journal Exceptional . . . [Aucoin's] passion is evident in every chapter . . . An inspirational trip through highlights of 400 years of opera. --Kirkus Reviews [The Impossible Art's] investigations of musical themes and personal obsessions constitute a scholar's analysis and a practitioner's diary as well as a lover's rhapsody . . . [Aucoin's] intellect is sharp and varied, his tastes catholic. --Willard Spiegelman, The Wall Street Journal [The Impossible Art is] a magnificent blend of criticism and rapture. --John Domini, The Boston Globe Like Stravinsky and Rosen before him, Aucoin displays a prose style, a thoughtfulness, a brazenness of opinion arising from expertise, that put him in a league with those predecessors . . . Aucoin can really write. It is a pleasure to read his prose, and the moments when he makes me want to stop right now and go hear the music he describes so vividly are what makes the experience so pleasurable. --Thomas Forrest Kelly, Harvard Magazine Aucoin writes with a precise awareness of what has gone before in [opera's] domain. --Geoffrey O'Brien, The New York Review of Books Meaty, absorbing, fretting, and ultimately mind-blowing . . . The Impossible Art will last me the rest of my life. --Timothy Pfaff, The Bay Area Reporter Vivid . . . Aucoin has the impulses of a master auto mechanic, relishing the act of getting under the hood and pulling the engine apart. Best of all, he wants to pass that knowledge on to us. Eschewing musicological jargon, he conveys his enthusiasm and wonder as he spells out, bar by musical bar, how Monteverdi creates a mood or Mozart manages to touch our hearts in the final scene of The Marriage of Figaro. --Wynne Delacoma, The American Scholar Triple threat Matthew Aucoin: conductor, librettist, and composer, and now writer and thought leader. The Impossible Art sheds new light on the musicology, history, and personalities that bring opera to life, with a poet's appreciation of the importance of the libretto, often overlooked. Personal, witty, and well-researched, it will have you rushing to recordings of works you know well, and ones you have never heard, to listen with Aucoin's provocative insights in mind. --Renee Fleming Matthew Aucoin's The Impossible Art shines with unforced generosity; his generation's perceptiveness, honesty, and frank address; and the personally felt urgency of moving history forward. Writing with uncanny wisdom and a modesty that is equal parts nerdy and heroic, here is a musician who is as insightful about Auden as about Stravinsky and who blows your mind with psychedelic and synesthetic descriptions of Birtwistle. This is a book infused with first love, and first vows of clear-eyed, lifelong devotion. --Peter Sellars Deeply insightful and delightfully entertaining . . . The Impossible Art serves as a valuable guide to those who seek a more intimate relationship with art, with opera and with the mysteries of the human soul that reside within the realm of artistic creation--no matter how impossible that realm may be to approach. --Eamon Stein, Shelf Awareness I could not put this book down. To read such cogent insights from such an important composer is pure joy from beginning to end. I thought I knew a fair amount about opera, but I learned a lot. If you are new to opera, this book will draw you in--if you are already among the converted, this book will open your eyes to new vistas about this greatest of arts. --Patrick Summers, Artistic & Music Director of the Houston Grand Opera Opera lovers will be delighted by this conversational, memoir-style book from an author who has spent years studying and writing in the art form. --Elizabeth Berndt-Morris, Library Journal Aucoin speaks eloquently from his own experience as composer, conductor, writer, and pianist . . . With substantial lists of works cited and recommended recordings, Aucoin's insightful and informative opera history will engage everyone interested in music, including students and opera fans. --Booklist [Aucoin gives readers] a rare behind-the-scenes look at an art form with a reputation of being particularly impenetrable to outsiders. --Corinne Segal, Lit Hub