Tuesday, March 1, 2016

1670 – 1695 Tragedie lyrique


This is Lully's opera period and the period of Purcell, Corelli, Buxtehude, Pachelbel, Biber and the next generation of Venetian opera composers. It is the first generation of equal importance of instrumental music, the concerto grosso and tonality.



Venetian opera



Venetian opera had become international in scope, as in La Forza dell'Amor paterno (1678) by Alessandro Stradella (c.1645-82), Giustino (1683) by Lagrenzi, La Gerusalem liberata (1687) by Carlo Pallavicino (1630-88) and Enrico ditto il Leone (1689) by Agostino Steffani (1654-1728).



Cantata



Composed by all of the above plus M.A. Sartorio (c.1620-85) and Domenico Gabrielli (c.1650-90) and in France by Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1624-1704), cantatas were the experimental form of the period.



Tragedie lyrique



The first opera in French was Pastorale (1659) by Robert Cambert (c.1628-77) on a text by Abbé Perrin. A vogue was established with Pomone (1671) by Cambert, and quickly adopted by Lully with Cadmus et Hermione (1673). His operas were characterized by

(a) large ballets and choruses,
(b) a new recitative style with frequent meter changes,
(c) a thick, five-voice texture,
(d) French Overture, and
(e) short simple arias in aabb form.
His librettist was Jean-Philippe Quinault. Other Lully operas were Alceste (1674), Persée (1682), Amadis (1684), Roland (1685) and Armide (1686).




Oratorio



A pupil of Carissimi, Charpentier brought the oratorio to France. An example was Le Reniement de St. Pierre.



English dramatic music



Though operas in English were composed, Venus and Adonis (1684-85) by John Blow (1647-1708) and Dido and Aeneas (1689) by Henry Purcell (1658-96), more important from the English view was incidental music written for plays: Purcell's Dioclesian (1690), King Arthur (1691), The Fairy Queen (1692), The Tempest (1695) and Indian Queen (1695).




English songs, odes, anthems



Purcell also composed

(1) songs on ostinato basses, rondo forms and da capo arias which were collected in Orpheus Britannicus (1698),
(2) odes in several movements for chorus, soloists and orchestra, composed for large celebrations, and
(3) anthems. The distinction between full and verse anthem persisted, with the more popular verse anthem, in a distinctly baroque multi-movement form.


German opera



In 1678 Johann Theile's (1646-1724) Adam und Eva opened the Hamburg opera house.







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