Ippolito ed Aricia
Tommaso Traetta |
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Operas
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Ippolito ed Aricia is a "reform opera" in five acts by Tommaso Traetta with an Italian libretto by Carlo Innocenzo Frugoni. The opera is based upon abbé Simon-Joseph Pellegrin's libretto for Rameau's earlier opera Hippolyte et Aricie, which was in turn based on Racine's tragedy Phèdre. The opera premiered at the Teatro Ducale in Parma on May 9, 1759 and is still occasionally performed by opera companies today.[1][2]
Background and musical analysis
Ippolito ed Aricia was commissioned in 1759 by Guillaume du Tillot, a minister for Philip, Duke of Parma, on behalf of the duke and his wife, Princess Louise Élisabeth of France. At that time, both France and Spain thought of Parma as a strategic point of interest and subsidized the court heavily. The duke and his wife were particularly fond of French opera and Tillot promoted all forms of French musical theater at the court. However, Tillot decided that he wanted to commission an opera for the court that would merge Italian musical idioms, such as beautiful melodies and virtuosic coloratura display, with French dramatic forms like choruses, ballet, and supernatural elements. He approached Carlo Innocenzo Frugoni, court poet of Parma, with the idea of creating such an opera using the Italian text of Rameau's Hippolyte et Aricie. He agreed, and Tillot proceeded to recruit Tommaso Traetta to compose the music and Count Francesco Algarotti to assist Frugoni with the libretto.
The resulting work is a rare successful blend of Italian opera seria elements and the French tragédie lyrique. The opera has virtuosic exit arias in the opera seria tradition of Metastasio but is organized into five acts, as in French opera. There are 12 characters in the drama, four prominent instrumental sinfonias, elaborate choruses, and 26 dances, most of which are organized into suites. The instrumentation is highly creative and often employs solo or independent viola writing. Obbligato recitative is used for moments of extreme drama, and here the orchestral accompaniment is elaborate and complex. Choral movements are large and often involve solo passages for various members of the cast. Du Tillot advertised the performance extensively. The production was lavish and brilliant and the opera a huge success, for nothing like it had ever been tried before.[3]
Major roles
Role | Voice type[4] | Premiere cast, May 9, 1759[5] |
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Teseo (Theseus), king of Athens | tenor | Angelo Amorevoli |
Ippolito (Hippolytus), son of Teseo | soprano castrato | Filippo Elisi |
Fedra (Phaedra), Teseo's wife and stepmother to Ippolito | soprano | Maria Piccinelli Verziari |
Enone (Oenone), nurse and confidante of Fedra | soprano | Domenica Lambertini |
Aricia, princess of the blood royal of Athens | soprano | Caterina Gabrielli |
Diana, a goddess | soprano | Maria Monari |
Plutone (Pluto) | bass | Francesco Cavalli |
Tisifone | soprano | Antonia Fascitelli |
Mercurio (Mercury) | soprano (?)[6] | Ludovico Felloni |
Gran sacerdotessa di Diana, High Priestess of Diana | soprano | |
Una marinaia, a female sailor | soprano | |
Una cacciatrice, a huntress | soprano |
Recordings
- Ippolito ed Aricia with conductor David Golub, the Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia, and the Bratislava Chamber Choir. The cast includes Angelo Manzotti (Hippolytus), Patrizia Ciofi (Aricia), Elena Lopéz (Phaedra), Simon Edwards (Theseus), Maria Miccoli (Oenone), Stefania Donzelli (Diana), Luca Grassi (Plutone), Monica Sesto (Tisifone), Saverio Fiore (Mercurio), Sara Allagretta (High priestess), Angela Masi (Una Marinajna), Rossana Potenza (Una Cacciatrice), and Loredana Cinieri (Le Parche Madia Todisco). Recorded live in 1999 and released in 2000.[7]
References
- ↑ Opera Today : TRAETTA: Ippolito ed Aricia
- ↑ Tommaso Traetta: Information and Much More from Answers.com
- ↑ Ipplito ed Aricia, opera in 5 acts: Information and Much More from Answers.com
- ↑ According to Blanchetti.
- ↑ Cast list on ItalianOpera.eu
- ↑ The very small role of Mercury is stated by Blanchetti to be a soprano part, but the first performer, Ludovico Antonio Felloni, was in fact a bass (Dizionario della Musica del Ducato di Parma e Piacenza).
- ↑ Tp4 website
Sources
- (in Italian) Blanchetti, Francesco, Ippolito ed Aricia, in Gelli, Piero & Poletti, Filippo (eds.),Dizionario dell'Opera 2008, Milano, Baldini Castoldi Dalai, 2007, pp. 667–668. ISBN 978-88-6073-184-5 (the article is reproduced online at OperaManager.com)
- (in Italian) ItalianOpera.eu
- (in Italian) Amadeus Almanac, accessed 12 September 2008