The early baroque opera L'Orfeo , composed by Claudio Monteverdi to a libretto by Alessandro Striggio the Younger, was first performed in 1607. It is Monteverdi's first opera, and one of the earliest in the new genre. In Monteverdi's hands, according to music historian Donald Jay Grout, "the new form [of opera] passed out of the experimental stage, acquiring ... a power and depth of expression that makes his music dramas still living works after more than three hundred years". [1] In his work, Monteverdi incorporates the "speech-song" or recitative first used in Jacopo Peri's opera Dafne and Giulio Caccini's Euridice , both direct precursors of L'Orfeo, and adds solo arias, duets, ensembles, dances and instrumental interludes. [2]
The story of the opera follows the Greek legend of Orpheus, who descends to Hades to persuade the gods of the Underworld to allow him to bring his dead bride, Eurydice, back to the living world. His plea is granted, on the condition that he does not look back while leading Eurydice out of Hades. However, fearful that he is being betrayed, Orpheus does look back and Eurydice is lost to him for ever. [3] In an ending which departs from the myth, Orpheus is rescued from his grief by Apollo, who invites him to ascend to the heavens where he will be able to look on Eurydice's semblance in the stars. Striggio's original ending, not preserved in the first published score of 1609, followed more closely to that of the myth, in which the grieving Orpheus is set upon by wild women (maenads or Bacchantes) and dismembered (though Striggio's version does not include the bloody denouement). [4]
Monteverdi's 1609 score includes an incomplete listing of the parts. Voice types are indicated by clef markings for each singer's part. These are generally interpretable in terms of soprano, alto, tenor and bass roles. Roles are frequently doubled, e.g. La musica and Eurydice, Ninfa and Prosperina, La messagera and Speranza, and others. [5]
Performer(s) | First lines [6] | Notes |
---|---|---|
Orchestral ensemble | Toccata | Played three times |
Prologue | ||
La musica (Music) | Dal mio Parnasso amato a voi ne vegno ("From my beloved Parnassus I come to you") | A ritornello for strings plays at the beginning and ending of the prologue, and between its verses. |
Act 1 | ||
Pastore secondo (Second shepherd) | In questo lieto e fortunato giorno ("On this gay, happy day") | |
Coro di ninfi e pastori (Chorus of Nymphs and Shepherds) | Viena, Imenco, deh, vieni ("Come, Hymen, o come") | |
Ninfa (Nymph) | Muse, onor di Parnasso, amor del cielo ("Ye Muses, the honour of Parnassus, the love of Heaven") | |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Lasciate i monti, lasciate i fonti ("Leave the mountains, leave the fountains") | In two sections, with an instrumental ritornello after each section |
Pastore primo (First shepherd) | Ma tu, gentil cantor, s'a tuoi lamenti ("But thou, gentle singer, whose laments of love...") | |
Orfeo (Orpheus) | Rosa del ciel, vita del mondo ("Rose of the heavens, life of the earth") | |
Euridice (Eurydice) | Io non diro qual sia neltuo gioir ("I cannot say how great my bliss is.") | Followed by a reprise of choruses:; "Lasciate i monti" and ritornello; "Vieni, Imeneo" and ritornello |
Pastori primo, secondo, terzo e quarto, ninfa (First, second, third and fourth shepherds, and nymph) | Ma se il nostro gioir dal ciel deriva ("But if our rejoicing comes from Heaven") | With ritornelli |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Ecco Orfeo, cui pur dianzi ("Here is Orpheus, for whom sighs were food") | |
Act 2 | ||
Orchestra | Sinfonia | |
Orfeo, pastori secondo e terzo | Ecco pur ch'a voi ritorno ("Behold I return to you") | Sections interspersed with ritornelli |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Dunque fa' degni, Orfeo ("Then, Orpheus, make worthy") | Followed by ritornello |
Orfeo | Vi ricorda, o boschi ombrosi ("Do you remember, o shady woods") | Sections interspersed with ritornelli |
Pastore secondo | Mira, deh mira, Orfeo, che d'ogni intorno ("Look, Orpheus, o lookhow on all sides...") | |
La messaggera, Pastore primo, secondo e terzo, Orfeo | Ahi, caso acerbo, ahi, fato empio e crudele ("Ah, bitter happening, ah impious and cruel fate") | |
La messaggera | In un fiorito prato ("In a flowery meadow") | |
Pastori secondo e terzo | Ahi, caso acerbo, ahi, fato empio e crudele ("Ah, bitter happening, ah impious and cruel fate") | |
Orfeo | Tu se' morta, mia vita, ed io respiro? ("Thou art dead, my love, and I am breathing?") | |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Ahi, caso acerbo, ahi, fato empio e crudele ("Ah, bitter happening, ah impious and cruel fate") | |
La messaggera | Ma io, che in questo lingua ("But I, who with this tongue...") | |
Orchestra | Sinfonia | |
Pastore secondo e terzo | Chi ni consola, ahi lassi? ("Who shall console us unhappy ones?") | |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Ahi, caso acerbo, ahi, fato empio e crudele ("Ah, bitter happening, ah impious and cruel fate") | |
Pastore secondo e terzo | Ma dove, ah dove or sono ("But where, o where is now...") | |
Coro di ninfi e pastori | Ahi, caso acerbo, ahi, fato empio e crudele ("Ah, bitter happening, ah impious and cruel fate") | Act ends with ritornello (La musica) |
Act 3 | ||
Orchestra | Sinfonia (Underworld) | |
Orfeo | Scorto da te, mio nume ("Escorted by thee, my Goddess") | |
La speranza (Hope) | Ecco l'atra palude, ecco il nocchiero ("Here is the desolate swamp, here is the boatman") | |
Orfeo | Dove, ah, dove ten'vai ("Wither, o wither dost thou go?") | |
Caronte (Charon) | O tu ch'innanzi morte a queste rive ("O thou who darest before death...") | |
Orchestra | Sinfonia (Underworld): reprise | |
Orfeo | Possente spirto e formidabil nume ("Mighty spirit and powerful divinity") | With ritornelli |
Caronte | Ben mi lusinga alquanto ("Much I am flattered") | |
Orfeo | Ahi, sventurato amante ("Ah, unhappy lover that I am") | In two sections; the Underworld sinfonia plays at the end of each section |
Coro di spiriti (Chorus of spirits) | Nulla impresa per uom si tenta invano ("Nothing is undertaken by man in vain") | Act concludes with further reprise of Underworld sinfonia. |
Act 4 | ||
Proserpina (Proserpine) | Signor, quell'infelice ("My lord, this unhappy one...") | |
Plutone (Pluto) | Benché severo ed immutabil fato ("Although stern and immutable fate...") | |
Spiriti primo e secondo (First and second spirits) | O de gli abitator del'ombre eterne (2O mighty king of the eternal world of shadows") | |
Proserpina, Plutone, spirito primo e coro di spiriti | Quali grazie ti rendo ("How shall I ever than thee...") | Followed by ritornello |
Orfeo, spirito terzo (Third spirit) | Quale onor de te fia degno ("What honour is worthy of thee") | Interspersed with two ritornelli |
Euridice, spirito primo | Ahi, vista troppo dolce e troppo amara ("Ah, sight too sweet and too bitter") | |
Orfeo | Dove ten'vai mia vita? ("Whither goest thou, my life?") | Followed by Underworld sinfonia |
Coro di spiriti | E la virtute un raggio di celeste bellezza ("Virtue is a ray of heavenly beauty") | Followed by Underworld sinfonia |
Act 5 | ||
Orfeo, Eco (Echo) | Questi i campi di Tracia, e quest'e il loca ("These are the fields of Thrace, and this is the place...") | Preceded by ritornello (La musica) |
Orfeo | S'hai del mio mal pietade io ti ringrazio ("If thou has pity for me in my suffering, I thank thee") | Followed by ritornello |
Apollo, Orfeo | Perchè a lo sdegno ed al dolor in preda ("Why dost thou give thyself up as prey...") | Followed by ritonello |
Coro di pastori | Vanne Orfeo, felice appieno ("Go, Orpheus, completely happy") | Followed by ritornello |
Orchestra | Moresca (Moorish dance) | End of opera |
End of opera | ||
Original version of act 5, per 1607 libretto | ||
Orfeo, Eco (Echo) | Questi i campi di Tracia, e quest'e il loca ("These are the fields of Thrace, nd this is the place...") | Preceded by ritornello (La musica) |
Orfeo | S'hai del mio mal pietade io ti ringrazio ("If thou has pity for me in my suffering, I thank thee") | Followed by ritornello |
Coto di Baccanti (Chorus of Bacchantes) | Evohe padre Lieo, Bassareo ("Hail, Father Lyaeus, Bacchus!") | |
Due Baccanti | Fuggito è pur da questa destra ultrice ("Flown from this avenging arm...") | |
Coro di Baccanti, due Baccanti | Evohe padre Lieo, Bassareo ("Hail, Father Lyaeus, Bacchus!") | Chorus repeated three times after soloist passages |
Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi was an Italian composer, string player, choirmaster, and priest. A composer of both secular and sacred music, and a pioneer in the development of opera, he is considered a crucial transitional figure between the Renaissance and Baroque periods of music history.
The year 1607 in music involved some significant events.
Orfeo ed Euridice is an opera composed by Christoph Willibald Gluck, based on the myth of Orpheus and set to a libretto by Ranieri de' Calzabigi. It belongs to the genre of the azione teatrale, meaning an opera on a mythological subject with choruses and dancing. The piece was first performed at the Burgtheater in Vienna on 5 October 1762, in the presence of Empress Maria Theresa. Orfeo ed Euridice is the first of Gluck's "reform" operas, in which he attempted to replace the abstruse plots and overly complex music of opera seria with a "noble simplicity" in both the music and the drama.
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Euridice is an opera by Jacopo Peri, with additional music by Giulio Caccini. It is the earliest surviving opera, Peri's earlier Dafne being lost. The libretto by Ottavio Rinuccini is based on books X and XI of Ovid's Metamorphoses which recount the story of the legendary musician Orpheus and his wife Euridice.
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La catena d'Adone is the only surviving opera by the Italian composer Domenico Mazzocchi. It was commissioned by Cardinal Ippolito Aldobrandini and first performed at the Palazzo Conti, Rome on February 12, 1626. The libretto, in a prologue and five acts, is by Ottavio Tronsarelli and is based on episodes from Giambattista Marino's epic poem Adone (1623).
The ancient legend of Orpheus and Eurydice concerns the fateful love of Orpheus of Thrace for the beautiful Eurydice. Orpheus was the son of Apollo and the muse Calliope. It may be a late addition to the Orpheus myths, as the latter cult-title suggests those attached to Persephone. It may have been derived from a legend in which Orpheus travels to Tartarus and charms the goddess Hecate.
"Possente spirto, e formidabil nume" is a key aria from Act 3 of Claudio Monteverdi's opera L'Orfeo, where Orpheus attempts to persuade Charon to allow him to pass into Hades and find Euridice.
In Greek mythology, Eurydice or Eurydike was the wife of Orpheus, whom he tried to bring back from the dead with his enchanting music.
Kurt Equiluz is an Austrian classical tenor in opera and concert, known for recording works of Johann Sebastian Bach with Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Helmuth Rilling, a member of the Vienna State Opera as a tenor buffo from 1957 until 1983.
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Giovanni Gualberto Magli was an Italian castrato who had an active singing career during the first quarter of the 17th century. Born in Florence, he studied voice with Giulio Caccini before becoming a musician for the House of Medici on 23 August 1604. He participated in the world premiere of Claudio Monteverdi's L'Orfeo in 1607 at the court of Prince Francesco IV Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua, portraying the roles of La Musica and Proserpina and possibly one other part. The musicologist and historian Hans Redlich mistakenly allocates Magli to the role of Orfeo. In 1608 he sang for the wedding festivities of Cosimo II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Archduchess Maria Maddalena of Austria. In October 1611 he was granted two years paid leave by Antonio de' Medici to pursue further studies in Naples. He left Medici service in 1615 to join the musicians at the court of John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg. He remained there until September 1622. He was buried in Florence on 8 January 1625.
Giovanni Maria Bacchini was an Italian castrato, composer, writer on music, and Roman Catholic priest who flourished during the late 16th century and early 17th century.
The Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi (1567–1643), in addition to a large output of church music and madrigals, wrote prolifically for the stage. His theatrical works were written between 1604 and 1643 and included operas, of which three—L'Orfeo (1607), Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria (1640) and L'incoronazione di Poppea (1643)—have survived with their music and librettos intact. In the case of the other seven operas, the music has disappeared almost entirely, although some of the librettos exist. The loss of these works, written during a critical period of early opera history, has been much regretted by commentators and musicologists.
Rotraud Hansmann is an Austrian soprano in opera and concert. She was a singer in the recordings by Nikolaus Harnoncourt which began historically informed performances, such as Monteverdi's operas and works by Johann Sebastian Bach. She was a teacher at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna.