Partenope (Vinci)
La Rosmira fedele, also known in modern revivals as Partenope, is a 1725 opera by Leonardo Vinci. It is largely based on Domenico Sarro's 1707 setting of Silvio Stampiglia's libretto Partenope but with new arias by Vinci.[1] It was premiered 31 January with Antonia Merighi as Queen Partenope and Faustina Bordoni as Rosmira.[2] Vivaldi set Stampiglia's libretto as a pasticcio Rosmira Fedele in 1738 using arias by Handel, Hasse, Pergolesi, and minor local Venetian composers.[3]
Recording
- Partenope Sonia Prina, Maria Grazia Schiavo, Maria Ercolano, Eufemia Tufano, Stefano Ferrari, Antonio Florio, Dynamic 2DVD 2013[4]
gollark: Obviously it's just a bunch of transistors physically.
gollark: I mean that in the general sense.
gollark: Hardware encryption means your device is using a hardware mechanism to store keys or do the crypto operations.
gollark: ...
gollark: I mean, on any recent Android version your data folder is encrypted.
References
- Kurt Sven Markstrom - The Operas of Leonardo Vinci, Napoletano 1576470946 2007 - Page 108 "This work demonstrates both the proximity of pasticcio and composition and the hegemony of the aria in eighteenth-century Italian opera, since it is Vinci's set of new arias that transforms Sarro's Partenope into Vinci's La Rosmira fedele.
- Eleanor Selfridge-Field A New Chronology of Venetian Opera and Related Genres, 1660-1760
- Gramophone Rosmira Fidele "few of its arias were actually composed by Vivaldi, who prepared this entertainment by extensively borrowing arias by Handel, Hasse, Pergolesi, and some obscure Venetian composers who will most likely remain forgotten."
- "Partenope: Leonardo Vinci (1725)". Jan 14, 2015. Retrieved Jun 19, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.