Italian opera is both the art of opera in Italy and
opera in the Italian language. Opera was born in Italy
around the year 1600 and Italian opera has continued to play a dominant role in
the history of the form until the present day. Many famous operas in Italian
were written by foreign composers, including Handel, Gluck and Mozart. Works by
native Italian composers of the 19th and early 20th centuries, such as Rossini,
Bellini, Donizetti, Verdi and Puccini, are amongst the most famous operas ever
written and today are performed in opera houses across the world.
The Baroque era
Opera did not remain confined to court
audiences for long. In 1637, the idea of a "season" (Carnival) of
publicly attended operas supported by ticket sales emerged in Venice . Monteverdi
had moved to the city from Mantua and composed his last operas, Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria and
L'incoronazione di Poppea, for the Venetian theatre in the 1640s. His most
important follower Francesco Cavalli helped spread opera throughout Italy . In
these early Baroque operas, broad comedy was blended with tragic elements in a
mix that jarred some educated sensibilities, sparking the first of opera's many
reform movements, sponsored by the Arcadian Academy, which came to be
associated with the poet Metastasio, whose libretti helped crystallize the
genre of opera seria, which became the leading form of Italian opera until the
end of the 18th century. Once the Metastasian ideal had been firmly
established, comedy in Baroque-era opera was reserved for what came to be
called opera buffa.
Before such elements were forced out of
opera seria, many libretti had featured a separately unfolding comic plot as
sort of an "opera-within-an-opera." One reason for this was an
attempt to attract members of the growing merchant class, newly wealthy, but
still not as cultured as the nobility, to the public opera houses. These
separate plots were almost immediately resurrected in a separately developing
tradition that partly derived from the commedia dell'arte, a long-flourishing
improvisatory stage tradition of Italy .
Just as intermedi had once been performed in-between the acts of stage plays,
operas in the new comic genre of "intermezzi", which developed
largely in Naples in the 1710s and '20s, were initially staged during the
intermissions of opera seria. They became so popular, however, that they were
soon being offered as separate productions.
Opera seria was elevated in tone and highly
stylised in form, usually consisting of secco recitative interspersed with long
da capo arias. These afforded great opportunity for virtuosic singing and
during the golden age of opera seria the singer really became the star. The
role of the hero was usually written for the castrato voice; castrati such as
Farinelli and Senesino, as well as female sopranos such as Faustina Bordoni,
became in great demand throughout Europe as opera seria ruled the stage in every country except France .
Indeed, Farinelli was one of the most famous singers of the 18th century.
Italian opera set the Baroque standard. Italian libretti were the norm, even
when a German composer like Handel found himself composing the likes of Rinaldo
and Giulio Cesare for London audiences. Italian libretti remained dominant in the classical
period as well, for example in the operas of Mozart, who wrote in Vienna near the
century's close. Leading Italian-born composers of opera seria include
Alessandro Scarlatti, Vivaldi and Porpora.
Reform: Gluck, the attack on the Metastasian
ideal, and Mozart
Opera seria had its weaknesses and critics.
The taste for embellishment on behalf of the superbly trained singers, and the
use of spectacle as a replacement for dramatic purity and unity drew attacks.
Francesco Algarotti's Essay on the Opera (1755) proved to be an inspiration for
Christoph Willibald Gluck's reforms. He advocated that opera seria had to
return to basics and that all the various elements—music (both instrumental and
vocal), ballet, and staging—must be subservient to the overriding drama. In
1765 Melchior Grimm published "Poème lyrique", an influencial article
for the Encyclopédie on lyric and opera librettos. Several composers of the
period, including Niccolò Jommelli and Tommaso Traetta, attempted to put these
ideals into practice. The first to succeed however was Gluck. Gluck strove to
achieve a "beautiful simplicity". This is evident in his first reform
opera, Orfeo ed Euridice, where his non-virtuosic vocal melodies are supported
by simple harmonies and a richer orchestra presence throughout.
Gluck's reforms have had resonance
throughout operatic history. Weber, Mozart and Wagner, in particular, were
influenced by his ideals. Mozart, in many ways Gluck's successor, combined a
superb sense of drama, harmony, melody, and counterpoint to write a series of
comedies, notably Così fan tutte, The Marriage of Figaro, and Don Giovanni (in
collaboration with Lorenzo Da Ponte) which remain among the most-loved, popular
and well-known operas today. But Mozart's contribution to opera seria was more
mixed; by his time it was dying away, and in spite of such fine works as
Idomeneo and La clemenza di Tito, he would not succeed in bringing the art form
back to life again.
Bel canto, Verdi and verismo
The bel canto opera movement flourished in
the early 19th century and is exemplified by the operas of Rossini, Bellini,
Donizetti, Pacini, Mercadante and many others. Literally "beautiful
singing", bel canto opera derives from the Italian stylistic singing
school of the same name. Bel canto lines are typically florid and intricate,
requiring supreme agility and pitch control. Examples of famous operas in the
bel canto style include Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia and La Cenerentola,
as well as Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor.
Following the bel canto era, a more direct,
forceful style was rapidly popularized by Giuseppe Verdi, beginning with his
biblical opera Nabucco. Verdi's operas resonated with the growing spirit of
Italian nationalism in the post-Napoleonic era, and he quickly became an icon
of the patriotic movement (although his own politics were perhaps not quite so
radical). In the early 1850s, Verdi produced his three most popular operas: Rigoletto , Il trovatore and
La traviata. But he continued to develop his style, composing perhaps the
greatest French Grand Opera, Don Carlos, and ending his career with two
Shakespeare-inspired works, Otello and Falstaff, which reveal how far Italian
opera had grown in sophistication since the early 19th century.
After Verdi, the sentimental
"realistic" melodrama of verismo appeared in Italy .
This was a style introduced by Pietro Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana and
Ruggero Leoncavallo's Pagliacci that came virtually to dominate the world's
opera stages with such popular works as Giacomo Puccini's La bohème, Tosca,
Madama Butterfly and Turandot. Later Italian composers, such as Berio and Nono,
have experimented with modernism.
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