Arbace

Arbace is an opera seria in three acts by Francesco Bianchi. The libretto was by Gaetano Sertor.

The opera was forward looking in its structure, with tension gradually mounting, via an exciting prison scene ("a fore-shadowing of romanticism"[1]) to a considerable climax. Marita P. McClymonds remarks on "The use of tonality, modality, chromaticism and strong dynamic contrasts for expressive purposes, as well as the liberal use of wind instruments ..."[2]

Performance history

The opera was first performed at the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples on 20 January 1781. It was revived again in the same theatre on 4 November that same year.

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 20 January 1781
(Conductor: Michele Nasci)
Arbace (Arbaces) soprano castrato Luigi Marchesi
Semiri, Arbace's wife soprano Maria Balducci
Scitalce (Sardanapalus), ruler of Assyria tenor Antonio Pini
Alsinda, Scitalce's sister soprano Elisabetta Minghelli
Idaspe soprano castrato Calogero Barbarini
Argante soprano castrato Antonio Rubinacci

Synopsis

Arbace's wife Semiri is in the hands of the lascivious Assyrian tyrant Scitalce. Arbace tries to rescue her by pretending to be his own assassin. Eventually they are rescued by Idaspe, Scitalce dies in a conflagration, and Arbace becomes the new ruler of Assyria.

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gollark: Entirely anecdotally, I live in [RURAL AREA REDACTED] and don't like it because there is *nothing to do here*. Generally speaking, cities being less city-y would probably reduce productivity a lot which would be bad.

References

  1. McClymonds, Marita P (1992), 'Arbace' in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera vol 1 p 162
  2. McClymonds, Marita P (1992), 'Arbace' in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera vol 1 p 162
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005)."Arbace, 20 January 1781". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • McClymonds, Marita P (1992), 'Arbace' in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, ed. Stanley Sadie (London) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
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