La divisione del mondo

La divisione del mondo (en: The Division of the World) is an opera in 3 acts by composer Giovanni Legrenzi.[1] The opera uses an Italian language libretto by Giulio Cesare Corradi and was commissioned by the Marquis Guido Rangoni.[2] The opera tells the story of the division of the world after the Titan deities were defeated by the Olympian gods. The goddess Venus provides the central conflict of the opera through a series of moral temptations which lead all of the other gods, with the exception of Saturn, into debauchery.[1]

La divisione del mondo
Opera by Giovanni Legrenzi
Illustration from the 1675 libretto
LibrettistGiulio Cesare Corradi
Premiere
4 February 1675 (1675-02-04)
Teatro San Salvador, Venice

La divisione del mondo premiered on 4 February 1675 in Venice at the Teatro San Salvador.[3] The opera was immensely successful at its premiere; and became Lengrenzi's most widely performed work, with 13 productions in Italy between 1683 and 1699.[4] Part of the work's success was due to the elaborate and expensive sets, machinery, and special effects employed at its premiere.[2]

In 2000 La divisione del mondo had its first modern revival at the Schwetzingen Festival using a performance score prepared by musicologist Thomas Hengelbrock.[5] The production was directed by Philippe Arlaud and starred Sonora Vaice as Venus, Kobie van Rensburg as Jupiter, Gabriela Sima as Juno, Simone Kermes as Cinzia, Matthias Rexroth in Apollo, Ilana Davidson as Cupid, Bernhard Landauer as Mercury, Hilary Summers as Mars, James Taylor as Neptune, Wolf Matthias Friedrich as Pluto, and Petteri Salomaa as Saturn. Hengelbrock conducted the Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble for the performances.[6]

The opera was revived in March 2019 at the Opéra National de Lorraine in Nancy to widespread acclaim.[7]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast
4 February 1675
Giove (Jupiter), brother of Nettuno and Plutone tenor
Nettuno (Neptune), brother of Giove and Plutone tenor
Plutone (Pluto), brother of Giove and Nettuno baritone
Saturno (Saturn), father of Giove, Nettuno and Plutone baritone
Giunone (Juno), wife of Giove mezzo-soprano
Venere (Venus), mother of Amore soprano
Apollo, brother of Cinzia contralto Caterina Forti[8]
Marte (Mars), son of Giove and Giunone contralto
Cinzia (Cynthia), sister of Apollo soprano
Amore (Cupid), son of Venere soprano
Mercurio (Mercury), son of Giove contralto
Discordia (Eris) contralto
gollark: They said they were brazil or something, and it turned into a meme resulting in the creation of the Brazil Tower and stuff.
gollark: Oh yes, definitely.
gollark: Despite said person repeatedly saying no.
gollark: They begged some random person to make an "Apple computer factory" with them.
gollark: I don't remember very well but I think I just stuck it on pastebin so people could look at it.

References

  1. Bruno Forment (2012). (Dis)embodying Myths in Ancien Régime Opera: Multidisciplinary Perspectives. Leuven University Press. pp. 28–29.
  2. Alois Maria Nagler (1959). A Source Book in Theatrical History. Courier Corporation. p. 269.
  3. Giovanni Legrenzi; Giulio Cesare Corradi. Dario Zanotti (ed.). "La divisione del mondo" (PDF). librettidopera.it.
  4. Stephen Bonta: "Giovanni Legrenzi", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed June 27, 2005), (subscription access)
  5. Horst Koegler (August 2007). Germany: Schwetzingen. Opera. p. 39.
  6. Review: La divisione del mondo. Early Music Review. 2000. pp. 10–11.
  7. Thomé, Michel. "La Divisione del Mondo à Nancy : crise familiale chez les Jupiter « La Scène « ResMusica" (in French). Retrieved 2019-03-27.
  8. Beth L(ise) Glixon (2005). Inventing the Business of Opera: The Impresario and His World in Seventeenth-Century Venice. Oxford University Press. p. 176.
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