翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Italian occult psychedelia
・ Italian occupation of Corsica
・ Italian occupation of France
・ Italian occupation of Majorca
・ Italian Online Movie Award for Best Actress
・ Italian Online Movie Award for Best Supporting Actor
・ Italian Online Movie Award for Best Supporting Actress
・ Italian Online Movie Awards
・ Italian Online Movie Awards 2004
・ Italian Online Movie Awards 2005
・ Italian Open
・ Italian Open (darts)
・ Italian Open (golf)
・ Italian Open (tennis)
・ Italian Open Masters
Italian opera
・ Italian Operations Research Society
・ Italian order of battle for the Second Italo-Ethiopian War
・ Italian Order of Merit for Culture and Art
・ Italian order of precedence
・ Italian orthography
・ Italian overture
・ Italian Owl pigeon
・ Italian Pakistani
・ Italian Parliament
・ Italian participation in the Eastern Front
・ Italian Partisan Republics
・ Italian passport
・ Italian Patent and Trademark Office
・ Italian Peninsula


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Italian opera : ウィキペディア英語版
Italian opera

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.
==Origins==

(詳細はDafne'' by Jacopo Peri was the earliest composition considered opera, as understood today.〔This is not agreed by all authorities, see Grout and Williams, 1988, p. 41 (footnote) for references to other views〕 Peri's works, however, did not arise out of a creative vacuum in the area of sung drama. An underlying prerequisite for the creation of opera proper was the practice of monody. Monody is the solo singing/setting of a dramatically conceived melody, designed to express the emotional content of the text it carries, which is accompanied by a relatively simple sequence of chords rather than other polyphonic parts. Italian composers began composing in this style late in the 16th century, and it grew in part from the long-standing practise of performing polyphonic madrigals with one singer accompanied by an instrumental rendition of the other parts, as well as the rising popularity of more popular, more homophonic vocal genres such as the frottola and the villanella. In these latter two genres, the increasing tendency was toward a more homophonic texture, with the top part featuring an elaborate, active melody, and the lower ones (usually these were three-part compositions, as opposed to the four-or-more-part madrigal) a less active supporting structure. From this, it was only a small step to fully-fledged monody. All such works tended to set humanist poetry of a type that attempted to imitate Petrarch and his Trecento followers, another element of the period's tendency toward a desire for restoration of principles it associated with a mixed-up notion of antiquity.
The solo madrigal, frottola, villanella and their kin featured prominently in the intermedio or intermezzo, theatrical spectacles with music that were funded in the last seventy years of the 16th century by the opulent and increasingly secular courts of Italy's city-states. Such spectacles were usually staged to commemorate significant state events: weddings, military victories, and the like, and alternated in performance with the acts of plays. Like the later opera, an intermedi featured the aforementioned solo singing, but also madrigals performed in their typical multi-voice texture, and dancing accompanied by the present instrumentalists. They were lavishly staged, and led the scenography of the second half of the 16th century. The intermedi tended not to tell a story as such, although they occasionally did, but nearly always focused on some particular element of human emotion or experience, expressed through mythological allegory.
The staging in 1600 of Peri's opera ''Euridice'' as part of the celebrations for a Medici wedding, the occasions for the most spectacular and internationally famous intermedi of the previous century, was probably a crucial development for the new form, putting it in the mainstream of lavish courtly entertainment.
Another popular court entertainment at this time was the "madrigal comedy," later also called "madrigal opera" by musicologists familiar with the later genre. This consisted of a series of madrigals strung together to suggest a dramatic narrative, but not staged.〔Grout and Williams, 1988, p. 33〕 There were also two staged musical "pastoral"s, ''Il Satiro'' and ''La Disperazione di Fileno'', both produced in 1590 and written by Emilio de' Cavalieri. Although these lost works seem only to have included arias, with no recitative, they were apparently what Peri was referring to, in his preface to the published edition of his ''Euridice'', when he wrote: "Signor Emilio del Cavalieri, before any other of whom I know, enabled us to hear our kind of music upon the stage".〔Porter, William V. 1965, ("Peri and Corsi's ''Dafne'': Some New Discoveries and Observations" ), ''Journal of the American Musicological Society'', Vol. 18, No. 2 (Summer, 1965), p. 170, on JSTOR.org〕 Other pastoral plays had long included some musical numbers; one of the earliest, ''La fabula d'Orfeo'' (1480) by Poliziano had at least three solo songs and one chorus.〔Grout and Williams, 1988, p. 30〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Italian opera」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.