Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Eteocle e Polinice

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Librettist
  
Tebaldo Fattorini

Composer
  
Eteocle e Polinice httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Premiere
  
13 December 1674 (1674-12-13)Teatro San Salvador, Venice

Similar
  
La divisione del mondo, Zenobia e Radamisto, Il Giustino

Che fiero costume karaoke p ano accompaniment eteocle e polinice legrenzi


Eteocle e Polinice (Eteocles and Polynices) is an opera in 3 acts composed by Giovanni Legrenzi with an Italian language libretto by Tebaldo Fattorini based on The Thebaid. The opera premiered at the Teatro San Salvador in Venice on 13 December 1674.

Contents

Eteocle e polinice


Background and performance history

Little is known about the opera's librettist, Tebaldo Fattorini, apart from the fact that he came from a prominent family in Chioggia and was employed as a "house poet" for the Teatro San Salvador in Venice. In addition to writing Eteocle e Polinice, he also significantly revised Nicolò Minato's libretto for a new version of Cavalli's Scipione africano in 1677 and may also have revised Giovanni Giovannini's original libretto for its setting by Legrenzi as Adone in Cipro in 1675.

The libretto for the premiere performances of Eteocle e Polinice at the Teatro San Salvador in 1774 was dedicated of the "most noble ladies of Venice" ("Consacrato alle nobilissime dame di Venetia"). Subsequent productions of the opera with new dedications were staged in Naples (1689), Milan (1684), and Modena (1690). The opera consists of a total of 101 musical pieces, including arias, duets, quartets, etc. Its most well known aria, "Che fiero costume" (also known by its English title, "How void of compassion"), has been recorded by several well known opera singers, including Luciano Pavarotti, Ezio Pinza, and Richard Tucker. A manuscript score from the 1689 Neapolitan production has survived.

Richard Strauss made specific reference to this opera in Die schweigsame Frau, recomposing "Dolce Amor" as a duet which is sung in the course of the music lesson scene in act 3, as one of many such reappropriations of preexisting music Strauss used to create an "antique" atmosphere.

Roles

  • Eteocle, King of Thebes
  • Polinice, Eteocle's brother
  • Antigone, Eteocle and Polinice's sister
  • Arbante, Antigone's tutor
  • Cleante, Eteocle's confidante
  • Adrasto, King of Argos
  • Deifile, Adrasto's daughter, a warrior-princess
  • Argia, Deifile's sister
  • Silena, Argia's nurse
  • Tideo, Prince of Aetolia
  • Lenone, Tideo's servant
  • Eteocle's soldiers, Polinice's retinue, Antigone's pages, Adrasto's archers (silent roles)
  • Synopsis

    The immediate source of the libretto was the Latin poem The Thebaid by Statius wherein despite entreaties from their sister Antigone the brothers Eteocles and Polynices went to war with each other over who should rule Thebes. It ended with the principal characters all dying tragically through murder, suicide, or grief. However, Tebaldo Fattorini's libretto has a happy ending in which Antigone is reunited with Tideo, Prince of Aetolia, and Eteocle is reunited with the warrior-princess Deifile. The victorious Adrasto, the King of Argos who had been the ally of Polynices, supervises the return to peace and harmony.

    References

    Eteocle e Polinice Wikipedia


    Similar Topics