Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT151 S1 P3 Q18 Explanation

Words & Operas

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsAuthor OpinionHumanities

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Passage

Passage A Music does not always gain by association with words. Like images, words can excite the deepest emotions but are inadequate to express the emotions they excite. Music is more adequate, and hence will often seize an emotion that may have been excited by images or words, deepen its expression, is how words can gain by being set to music.

But to set words to music—as in opera or song—is in fact to mix two arts together. A striking effect may be produced, but at the expense of the purity of each art. Poetry is a great art; so is music. But as a medium for emotion, each is greater alone than even the plot or scenery, but upon its emotional range—a region dominated by the musical element.

Passage B Throughout the history of opera, two fundamental types may be distinguished: that in which the music is primary, and that in which there is, essentially, parity between music and other factors. The former, sometimes called “singer’s opera”—a term which has earned undeserved contempt—is exemplified by most Italian operas, while the limited, and a fuller participation of music was required to establish opera on a secure basis.

In any event, in any aesthetic judgment of opera, regardless of the opera’s type, neither the music nor the poetry of the libretto should be judged in isolation. The music is good not if it would make a good concert piece but if it serves the particular situation in the opera in It is this union—further enriched and clarified by the visual action—that results in opera’s inimitable character.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
18.

It can be inferred that the author of passage B has which one of the following opinions of opera in which the words are

Answer choices

  1. Too Strong: primarily popular4% picked this

    It is primarily a popular art

    This doesn't align with either of our available supporting ideas: 1. This type of opera has been criticized/hated unfairly. 2. We shouldn't judge the music or the lyrics on their own, but rather judge whether they work well together The fact that this type of opera is nicknamed "the singer's opera" makes it seem more like an art form loved by specialists than by popular audiences.

  2. Opposite: justly criticized12% picked this

    It has been justly criticized for betraying opera’s

    This goes against the first of the two available details we have. 1. This type of opera has been criticized/hated unfairly. 2. We shouldn't judge the music or the lyrics on their own, unless we have a specific formal purpose in mind. When it comes to aesthetic value, we should be judging whether the music and the supporting lyrics work well together and enhance the opera.

  3. Passage A, not B6% picked this

    It is emotionally more expressive than other types

    This doesn't align with either of our available supporting ideas: 1. This type of opera has been criticized/hated unfairly. 2. We shouldn't judge the music or the lyrics on their own, but rather judge whether they work well together Passage A spoke about whether music or words were more expressive of emotions. Passage B did not actually rank them. So this answer sounds more like it's meant to represent Passage A's opinion.

  4. Correct72% picked this

    It is as legitimate as other types

    Why this is right

    This aligns with the first of our available supporting ideas: 1. This type of opera has been criticized/hated unfairly. 2. We shouldn't judge the music or the lyrics on their own, but rather judge whether they work well together If the author thinks that this style of opera receives "undeserved contempt", she's saying that "this opera doesn't deserve to be hated. it deserves to be accepted. it is as legit as other types of opera". This is a good example of the RC principle It Pays to Be Stubborn, since we're unlikely to hear this wording as a match unless we're really forcing an answer to match a specific detail. Passage B's best opinion support for music-heavy operas is the line, "it has earned undeserved contempt". If we read every answer and stubbornly compare it to our available support, we have a better chance of matching this up.

    Skill tested: Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  5. Opposite6% picked this

    It should be judged as though it were a

    This goes against the second of our available supporting ideas: 1. This type of opera has been criticized/hated unfairly. 2. We shouldn't judge the music or the lyrics on their own, but rather judge whether they work well together Treating the music in a music-heavy opera as though it's a concert piece goes against B's advice: The music is good not if it would make a good concert piece but if it serves the particular situation in the opera in which it occurs.

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