RAG MusicClassic
Lovely classics

Famous pieces recommended for opera beginners. Recommended opera songs.

Opera, also known as music drama or grand opera, is a genre considered the most comprehensive of the performing arts within classical music.

Among its famous pieces are Nessun dorma from Turandot and the Toreador Song from Carmen—melodies many people recognize even if they don’t know the operas themselves.

Opera has produced countless masterpieces, and here we’ll highlight introductory works that, by knowing the music, can serve as a gateway to understanding opera.

People often assume opera is difficult, but in fact its music is heard in everyday life and feels familiar.

As you learn about the stories and composers, you’ll find many themes that are engaging and relevant even today.

I’ve put together this list in the hope that more people will get to know it better.

I hope you’ll enjoy these works alongside great performances from around the world.

Masterpieces recommended for opera beginners. Recommended opera pieces (41–50)

“The Fifth Door” from Bluebeard’s CastleBartók Béla

Bartók: Bluebeard’s Castle, Sz. 48 (Op. 11): Door 5. “Ah!” “Lásdez az én birodalmam”
"The Fifth Door" from Bluebeard's CastleBartók Béla

One of the masterpieces of modern opera is Bluebeard’s Castle, composed by Bartók.

Although Bartók was also an ethnomusicologist and left behind a great deal of exceptional music, he wrote only this one opera.

Despite having composed just a single opera, it has been hailed as a great masterpiece.

Overture to Die FledermausJohann Strauss

Johann Strauss / Operetta (Die Fledermaus) Overture / Berlin Philharmonic
Overture to Die FledermausJohann Strauss

The Strauss family, a musical dynasty culminating in Johann Strauss known as the “Father of the Waltz,” produced many musicians.

The son of Johann, also named Johann, was called the “Waltz King.” When people say “Johann Strauss,” they are referring to the son.

In conclusion

How was it? It’s interesting when you realize you knew just the tune, and upon listening again you find out it was from this part of the opera.

Hearing only the music, you can tell it works like underscore for games or films, and in an era without games, movies, or television, people created stages like this and enjoyed grand stories through live performance—masterpieces that remain with us today.

Listening to what comes before and after a famous piece gives you more context and can change how deeply the music moves you.

Since most operas are in German, Italian, or other languages, it can be hard for Japanese listeners to take them in smoothly, but if you listen while reading a translation of the lyrics, you can immerse yourself more deeply in that world.

I hope you’ll listen to the music while looking at the translated lyrics.

The pieces I’ve introduced are only a small handful of the many operas that exist.

I’d be delighted if you found a favorite opera and continued to enjoy the world of classical music as a comprehensive art form.

Thank you for watching.