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Documentation for https://venop.ccarh.org
 
Documentation for https://venop.ccarh.org
  
==The Historical Phenomenon, Then and Now==
+
==Venetian Opera Productions==
In our time most professionally-staged operas form part of the "standard repertory" that younger singers aspire to master. With few exceptions, the score, the roles, and the orchestra vary little from decade to decade if financial support is adequate. Title selections change from year to year and entirely new works are introduced as budgets permit, but most choices are drawn from a pool of well known works. More frequent changes may concern a manner of staging, scenery, costumes, and interpretations.
+
When the first opera was given at the Teatro San Cassiano in 1637, no one anticipated that the species of entertainment it offered would be durable. Predecessors were occasional works, given privately in grand splendor for weddings of important figures. From the start, Venetian theaters were run by impresari who leased boxes and sold tickets to a paying public. This steered the future course of the genre on a new trajectory.
  
The sheer quantity of works produced in Venice between our target years--1660 to 1760--offers a striking contrast with the few dozen works "in repertory" today and the nearly 900 presented here. Not all the differences are as great as they at first appear. After 1700 new titles could be slapped onto familiar plots. This practice affected the music in unpredictable ways, including 
+
As a venue for such entertainment, Venice did not have a lot of competition for several decades, but new theaters accumulated. Close historical analysis suggests that the enterprise as a whole never became self-funding. Yet the precarious operation of most theaters did not diminish the popularity of the genre. Opera constantly responded to challenging circumstances in a multitude of ways. This website enables users to investigate how and why over its core century, 1660-1760.
 +
 
 +
==The historical phenomenon, then and now==
 +
In our time most professionally-staged operas form part of a "standard repertory" that younger singers aspire to master. With few exceptions, the score, the roles, and the orchestra vary little from decade to decade if financial support is adequate. Title selections change from year to year and entirely new works are introduced as budgets permit, but most choices are drawn from a pool of well known works. More frequent changes may concern a manner of staging, scenery, costumes, or interpretation. 
 +
 
 +
The sheer quantity of works produced in Venice between our target years—1660 to 1760—offers a striking contrast with the few dozen works "in repertory" today. Not all the differences are as great as they at first appear. After 1700 new titles could be slapped onto familiar plots. The practice of "revise and disguise" produced unpredictable results. Some possible outcomes were: 
 
* arias from an earlier version might be pieced together with new recitatives
 
* arias from an earlier version might be pieced together with new recitatives
 
* portions of the work could be cut or altered
 
* portions of the work could be cut or altered
Line 10: Line 15:
 
* arias detached from one work could be introduced in another at performance
 
* arias detached from one work could be introduced in another at performance
  
The printed text prepared in advance for an opera might not fully correspond to the work as staged. By tracing productions, rather than works per se, we can associate a significant amount of rarely seen commentary with perforunctory title information to better understand the constantly shifting values and practices that supported performance.   
+
The printed text prepared in advance for an opera might not fully correspond to the work as staged. By tracing productions, rather than works per se, we can associate a significant amount of rarely seen commentary with perfunctory title information to better understand the constantly shifting values and practices that supported performance.   
  
 
===Essential parameters of Venetian opera===
 
===Essential parameters of Venetian opera===
From 1660 until the middle of the next century Venice usually had six theaters operating. (In prior decades the number fluctuated. Some theaters operated for only a few years.) Performances of a specific work were given on selected nights for two or three weeks. With regard to specific opening dates (see Sorting Date), some accommodation between theaters could occur, such as three works might open on consecutive days in an interleaved schedule. Ticket prices for an opening performance might be twice the normal amount. On a more general view, some ebbing and flowing of theatrical activity was associated with wars, pestilences, and economic conditions. (Venice was engaged in the a war in the Aegean--the "War in Candia"--from 1645 to 1667.) The more stable theaters might produce three works in a year in which Easter (and consequently that start of Lent) fell late, but two productions per theater per year was more likely. Operas were permitted only in periods of time uncontested by the Church and explicitly permitted by proclamation by the Republic.) The total number of days when opera was permitted was gradually expanded in the eighteenth century.
+
From 1660 until the middle of the next century Venice usually had six theaters operating. (In prior decades the number fluctuated. Some theaters operated for only a few years.) Performances of a specific work were given on selected nights for two or three weeks. With regard to specific opening dates (see Sorting Date), some accommodation between theaters could occur, such that three works might open on consecutive days in an interleaved schedule. Ticket prices for an opening performance might cost twice the normal amount.  
 +
 
 +
Some ebbing and flowing of theatrical activity was associated with wars, pestilences, and fluctuating economic conditions. (Venice was engaged in a war in the Aegean—the "War in Candia"—from 1645 to 1669.) The more stable theaters might produce three works in a year with a late Easter but two was more likely. Operas were permitted only in periods of time uncontested by the Church and explicitly permitted by proclamation by the Republic.) The total number of days when opera was permitted gradually increased over the course of the eighteenth century.
  
===Performance cycles===
+
===The ever-changing contents of an opera===
Today we would expect all performances of the same work in the same season to match one another in script, score, cast, and scenery. This attachment to fixity contrasts sharply with the dynamics of actual productions. While composer, librettist, singer, and other staff were hired to a full (autumn-winter) seasonal cycle, details of the content could change from night to night. Temperamental <i>prime donne</i> could appropriate favorite arias (and, rarely, costumes and props). "Suitcase arias" might appear over years in other works and other venues.
+
Today we would expect all performances of the "same" work in the same season to match one another in script, score, cast, and scenery. This attachment to fixity that characterizes our times contrasts sharply with the dynamics of actual productions before 1800. While composer, librettist, singers, and other staff were hired for a full (autumn-winter) seasonal cycle, details of the content could change from night to night. Temperamental <i>prime donne</i> could appropriate favorite arias. "Suitcase arias" could be carried by a singer to other venues and interjected in other operas. Singers of both genders were accused of appropriating costumes and props when performing fees were not paid promptly.
  
 
===Going to the opera in 1660 and 1760===
 
===Going to the opera in 1660 and 1760===
The cultural distance between the years around 1600 and our own times is considerable. In early Venetian theaters, important public figures rented or subleased a box for a season (or a lifetime) and bought a libretto at the door to follow the action onstage. Performances were permitted a maximum of four hours. The times of year when they were permitted was strictly regulated. Those lacking a box could rent a folding chair or stool by the evening. A small orchestra sat in front of the stage. In many cases two harpsichordists were present--one to accompany the singers, the other to accompany the orchestra.
+
The cultural distance between the years around 1600 and our own times is considerable. In early Venetian theaters, important public figures rented or subleased a box for a season (or a lifetime) and bought a libretto at the door to follow the action onstage. The times of year when opera productions were permitted was strictly regulated. Performances were permitted for a maximum of four hours from sunset. Those lacking a box could rent a folding chair or stool for the </i>parterre</i>. A small orchestra sat in front of the stage. In many cases two harpsichordists were present—one to accompany the singers, the other to accompany the orchestra.
 +
 
 +
[[File:HM-Draghi4.png|thumb|center|900px|<small>The Hof-Musici of Český Krumlov Theater, directed by Ondřej Macek, in the 2024 production of Antonio Draghi's 1680 <i>festa teatrale</i> called <i>I vaticini di Tiresia Tebano</i> (The Prophecies of Tiresias of Thebes). Used by permission.</small>]]
  
The limiting dates of this table mark the confines of a period during which a huge increase in productions forced a degree of predictability on patterns of performance, with significant implications for composers and performers. The same time-span also coincides with an abundance of minutely dated references to opera proudctions in weekly news-sheets, an under-the-radar source of local news organized into vast networks throughout Europe. In their vast accumulation lies the resolution of many questions that are difficult to resolve using standard historical resources.
+
The delimiting dates of this table (1660-1760) mark the confines of a period during which a huge increase in productions forced a degree of predictability on patterns of performance, with significant implications for composers and performers. The same time-span also coincides with an abundance of minutely dated references to opera productions in weekly news-sheets, an under-the-radar source of local news organized into vast networks throughout Europe. In their vast accumulation lies the resolution of many questions that are difficult to answer using standard historical resources.  
* See [https://wiki.ccarh.org/wiki/Dating_Venetian_Operas Dating Venetian Operas].
 
  
 
In modern life, periods considered appropriate for specific social activities are typically governed by commercial considerations and tacit agreements between potential competitors. In Venice, periods of opera production were governed by both civic and ecclesiastical dictates.
 
In modern life, periods considered appropriate for specific social activities are typically governed by commercial considerations and tacit agreements between potential competitors. In Venice, periods of opera production were governed by both civic and ecclesiastical dictates.
  
When people went to opera in Venice, they went in sizeable groups. Most attendees sat in a box to which they might carry drinks and refreshment. One member of the group would buy a libretto at the door. A candle would be necessary to see the libretto: theaters were dark inside. The opera impresario was responsible for lighting the outdoor space, the stage, and the instrumentalists' pit. No larger indoor space was heated. Attendees and personnel were expected to arrive by gondola. A dusk-to-dawn curfew meant that streets were dark.
+
When people went to the opera in Venice, they went in sizeable groups. Most attendees sat in a box to which they might carry drinks and refreshments. One member of the group would buy a libretto at the door. A candle would be necessary to see the libretto: theaters were dark inside. (Venetian theaters were repeatedly gutted by fires.) An opera impresario was responsible for lighting adjacent outdoor spaces, the stage, and the instrumentalists' pit. Attendees and personnel were expected to arrive by gondola. A dusk-to-dawn curfew meant that streets were deserted.
  
==The repertory as a corpus==
+
[[File:Cassiano-gate1c.png|thumb|right|225px|<small>Location of water-gate for the largely demolished Teatro San Cassiano, Venice's first public theater. Photo 2012, E. Selfridge-Field.</small>]]
Many studies of Venetian opera focus on a single work, or perhaps a small group of works related by a common subject (Artaxerxes was a popular one) or a single composer (e.g., Legrenzi or Pollarolo) or a single theater (e.g. San Salvatore). By considering almost 900 works from a single century together, we can trace dozens of rich strands of data in clusters that are rarely acknowledged.
 
  
Almost every production included here has a verified exact date of opening (a sorting date). Sorting dates for titles are especially useful in calibrating other fields chronologically.
+
By 1760 the audience for opera had changed considerably. The nobility was in decline. Many works might satirize bourgeoise traits in current culture such as speech, dress, or manners of behavior. Venice had to compete with its imitators in the realm of <i>opera buffa</i>. Pastorals were common in spring and autumn productions. Carnival remained the season of serious opera and noted singers, but fewer and fewer works were entirely new. The best known singers pursued opportunities abroad.  Venues north of the Alps promoted spring and summer operas, while new theaters in central and northern Europe drew performers away from Italy.
  
===Venetian opera before 1660===
+
Despite general acknowledgement of the historical importance of Venetian opera collectively, only a handful of Baroque operas are performed today. The reasons are many: the lack of survival of musical sources, the paucity of modern editions for works that survive, the expense of staging long, elaborate works of earlier times, and the lack of training in Baroque performing techniques in many potential venues.
  
Before 1660 the bulk of productions was limited, as were sources for dating them. What happened on stages under the rubric was the </i>dramma per musica</i> could involve many more component parts than works staged later. Early opera showed its origins in the realm of court spectacle. Elaborate prologues, which could involve separate casts and scenery, dominated some works. Owing to thinner documentation, dates are less certain. Works given by traveling groups were geographically neutral. No system of patronage has yet developed.
+
==The repertory as a corpus==
  
===Venetian opera after 1760===
+
Many studies of Venetian opera focus on a single work, or perhaps a small group of works related by a common subject (Artaxerxes was a popular one) or a single composer (e.g., Legrenzi or Pollarolo) or a single theater (e.g. San Salvatore, also called San Luca in the context of comedy). By considering almost 900 works from a single century together, we can trace dozens of rich strands of data in clusters that are rarely acknowledged.
  
In the 1750s the status of the <i>dramma per musica</i> as a musical-literary genre was compromised. The <i>opera buffa</i> from Naples won immediate fans without the elaborate apparatus or complicated patronage systems of its serious rival. More and more audience members in Venice were from the imperial precincts where stale formulas in dramatic plots were eclipsed by the shorter, gayer content of these newer works. This shift in reception paralleled a rise in prose comedy. Its presentation was heavily dominated by Carlo Goldoni, who moved to Paris in 1762. His detractors launched a "pamphlet war" to challenge the notion of opera in broad terms.
+
Almost every production included here has a verified exact date of opening (a sorting date). Sorting dates for titles are especially useful in calibrating other fields chronologically. On dating, see [https://wiki.ccarh.org/wiki/Dating_Venetian_Operas Dating Venetian Operas].
  
==Field list==
+
The 889 productions listed here consist largely of three-act <i>drammi per musica</i>. Details of the repertory as a whole were constantly shifting. The nature of the content in combination with precise dating information enables a wide range of approaches to interrogation. 
 +
The century from 1660 to 1760 differs from adjacent segments of a longer chronology in ways that suggest the need for a slightly different range of fields from those displayed here. The 96 productions mounted between 1637 and 1659 involved fewer theaters, some traveling troupes, and a wide range of component items within works. The seasonal framework that stabilized in the 1660s enables use to evaluate elements of stability and change in ways that are not possible with sparser material. Elaborate prologues, which could involve separate casts and scenery, dominated some works. No system of patronage developed until the 1670s.
  
 +
By the 1750s the status of the <i>dramma per musica</i> as a musical-literary genre was challenged by the rise of the <i>opera buffa</i>. Mainly Neapolitan, <i>opera buffa</i> won fans without the elaborate apparatus or complicated staging requirements of its serious rival. More and more audience members in Venice were from imperial precincts where stale formulas in dramatic plots were quickly eclipsed by the shorter, gayer content of these newer works. At the same time, the re-establishment of prose comedy, which was heavily dominated by Carlo Goldoni in the 1740s and 1750s, gave local audiences a range of choices. Goldoni's move to Paris in 1762 led to further fragmentation. The polemics of the "pamphlet wars" challenged the premises of opera in a noisy literary battle that spread from Paris to Venice.
  
Despite the lack of musical familiarity today's public may have with titles here, a significant number of titles from the eighteenth century were to become familiar in later times.
+
==[https://wiki.ccarh.org/wiki/Venetian_Opera_Productions:_Field_List Fields and filters]==
  
While the historic value of Venetian opera collectively is acknowledged, only a handful of Baroque operas are in the repertory today. The reasons are many: the lack of survival of the music, the paucity of modern editions for works that survive, the expense of staging long, elaborate works of earlier times, and the lack of training in Baroque performing techniques in many potential venues.  
+
Despite the lack of musical familiarity today's public may have with titles from earlier times, a significant number of subjects recurred throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yesterday's work was not as highly regarded as today's. Ironically, the quest for novelty may have been conducive to the growing practice of disguising revised works by supplying new titles.
  
Before public opera (1637) dramas with music and such antecedents as Florentine court intermedi were considered appropriate for festive occasions, such as royal weddings. Yet only extravagant court weddings gave occasion to these elaborate presentations, which could continue for days or weeks and included many incidental entertainments, often including music. Aristocratic family odysseys to a wedding venue could consume weeks. An array of entertainments might be provided at the destination.  
+
Before the alliance of public opera (1637) dramas with the <i>dramma per musica</i>, the most conspicuous model of what became "opera" was found in Florentine court intermedi. They in turn were considered appropriate for festive occasions, especially royal weddings. Such festivities could continue for days or weeks and often included many incidental entertainments. Aristocratic family odysseys en route to a wedding could also be dotted with an array of entertainments at each stop.
  
The survival of music is, in contrast, erratic.
+
==About Venetian Opera Productions==
 +
<br><b>Website design and management</b>: Craig Sapp
 +
<br><b>Content</b>: Eleanor Selfridge-Field
  
==Perspective views of the data==
+
<br><small><i>Background image on search page</i>: Fold-out etching by Domenico Rossetti from the libretto of <i>Berenice vendicativa</i> (music by Domenico Freschi, text by Gio. Maria Rapparini) premiered at the Villa Contarini on 8 November 1680 (Venice, Ca' Goldoni). Alvise Contarini served as doge from 1676 to 1684. The grandiose staging involved more than 400 supernumeraries plus 20 choruses, two lions, two elephants, and sixteen horses—four for Berenice's chariot and a dozen to cart prisoners. News reports relate that this entertainment, lasting for two weeks, was abruptly terminated by the collapse of a storage room for the chariots, which caused the panicked horses underneath to destroy some of the main props.</small>
The most revealing insights may come from viewing a few fields at a time. To facilitate some popular motives for search, we have selected clusters of fields related to musical elements of an opera, literary aspects of a work, patronage, and the complex variables that determined when any specific work was permitted to open. These  complement the cluster of core fields.
 
  
==The purpose of this resource==
+
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
The original purpose of this resource was to establish a clear, incontrovertible chronology of Venetian operas, which were first given in public theaters in 1637. The genre was unstable and the early venues ephemeral: no one anticipated the durability of opera as a genre. The component parts of the genre and manners of performance changed often. The main elements became more stable as the number of theaters increased (1660, 1677-78). When in the 1740s the theaters were beset by sundry problems, the <i>opera buffa</i> began to displace the <i>dramma per musica</i>, and the course of opera again became choppy and unpredictable. Satires of opera, caricatures of singers, and tracts against opera rose to the fore.
 

Latest revision as of 05:05, 19 October 2024

Documentation for https://venop.ccarh.org

Venetian Opera Productions

When the first opera was given at the Teatro San Cassiano in 1637, no one anticipated that the species of entertainment it offered would be durable. Predecessors were occasional works, given privately in grand splendor for weddings of important figures. From the start, Venetian theaters were run by impresari who leased boxes and sold tickets to a paying public. This steered the future course of the genre on a new trajectory.

As a venue for such entertainment, Venice did not have a lot of competition for several decades, but new theaters accumulated. Close historical analysis suggests that the enterprise as a whole never became self-funding. Yet the precarious operation of most theaters did not diminish the popularity of the genre. Opera constantly responded to challenging circumstances in a multitude of ways. This website enables users to investigate how and why over its core century, 1660-1760.

The historical phenomenon, then and now

In our time most professionally-staged operas form part of a "standard repertory" that younger singers aspire to master. With few exceptions, the score, the roles, and the orchestra vary little from decade to decade if financial support is adequate. Title selections change from year to year and entirely new works are introduced as budgets permit, but most choices are drawn from a pool of well known works. More frequent changes may concern a manner of staging, scenery, costumes, or interpretation.

The sheer quantity of works produced in Venice between our target years—1660 to 1760—offers a striking contrast with the few dozen works "in repertory" today. Not all the differences are as great as they at first appear. After 1700 new titles could be slapped onto familiar plots. The practice of "revise and disguise" produced unpredictable results. Some possible outcomes were:

  • arias from an earlier version might be pieced together with new recitatives
  • portions of the work could be cut or altered
  • all the arias for a specific cast member could be changed to suit a demanding singer
  • arias detached from one work could be introduced in another at performance

The printed text prepared in advance for an opera might not fully correspond to the work as staged. By tracing productions, rather than works per se, we can associate a significant amount of rarely seen commentary with perfunctory title information to better understand the constantly shifting values and practices that supported performance.

Essential parameters of Venetian opera

From 1660 until the middle of the next century Venice usually had six theaters operating. (In prior decades the number fluctuated. Some theaters operated for only a few years.) Performances of a specific work were given on selected nights for two or three weeks. With regard to specific opening dates (see Sorting Date), some accommodation between theaters could occur, such that three works might open on consecutive days in an interleaved schedule. Ticket prices for an opening performance might cost twice the normal amount.

Some ebbing and flowing of theatrical activity was associated with wars, pestilences, and fluctuating economic conditions. (Venice was engaged in a war in the Aegean—the "War in Candia"—from 1645 to 1669.) The more stable theaters might produce three works in a year with a late Easter but two was more likely. Operas were permitted only in periods of time uncontested by the Church and explicitly permitted by proclamation by the Republic.) The total number of days when opera was permitted gradually increased over the course of the eighteenth century.

The ever-changing contents of an opera

Today we would expect all performances of the "same" work in the same season to match one another in script, score, cast, and scenery. This attachment to fixity that characterizes our times contrasts sharply with the dynamics of actual productions before 1800. While composer, librettist, singers, and other staff were hired for a full (autumn-winter) seasonal cycle, details of the content could change from night to night. Temperamental prime donne could appropriate favorite arias. "Suitcase arias" could be carried by a singer to other venues and interjected in other operas. Singers of both genders were accused of appropriating costumes and props when performing fees were not paid promptly.

Going to the opera in 1660 and 1760

The cultural distance between the years around 1600 and our own times is considerable. In early Venetian theaters, important public figures rented or subleased a box for a season (or a lifetime) and bought a libretto at the door to follow the action onstage. The times of year when opera productions were permitted was strictly regulated. Performances were permitted for a maximum of four hours from sunset. Those lacking a box could rent a folding chair or stool for the parterre. A small orchestra sat in front of the stage. In many cases two harpsichordists were present—one to accompany the singers, the other to accompany the orchestra.

The Hof-Musici of Český Krumlov Theater, directed by Ondřej Macek, in the 2024 production of Antonio Draghi's 1680 festa teatrale called I vaticini di Tiresia Tebano (The Prophecies of Tiresias of Thebes). Used by permission.

The delimiting dates of this table (1660-1760) mark the confines of a period during which a huge increase in productions forced a degree of predictability on patterns of performance, with significant implications for composers and performers. The same time-span also coincides with an abundance of minutely dated references to opera productions in weekly news-sheets, an under-the-radar source of local news organized into vast networks throughout Europe. In their vast accumulation lies the resolution of many questions that are difficult to answer using standard historical resources.

In modern life, periods considered appropriate for specific social activities are typically governed by commercial considerations and tacit agreements between potential competitors. In Venice, periods of opera production were governed by both civic and ecclesiastical dictates.

When people went to the opera in Venice, they went in sizeable groups. Most attendees sat in a box to which they might carry drinks and refreshments. One member of the group would buy a libretto at the door. A candle would be necessary to see the libretto: theaters were dark inside. (Venetian theaters were repeatedly gutted by fires.) An opera impresario was responsible for lighting adjacent outdoor spaces, the stage, and the instrumentalists' pit. Attendees and personnel were expected to arrive by gondola. A dusk-to-dawn curfew meant that streets were deserted.

Location of water-gate for the largely demolished Teatro San Cassiano, Venice's first public theater. Photo 2012, E. Selfridge-Field.

By 1760 the audience for opera had changed considerably. The nobility was in decline. Many works might satirize bourgeoise traits in current culture such as speech, dress, or manners of behavior. Venice had to compete with its imitators in the realm of opera buffa. Pastorals were common in spring and autumn productions. Carnival remained the season of serious opera and noted singers, but fewer and fewer works were entirely new. The best known singers pursued opportunities abroad. Venues north of the Alps promoted spring and summer operas, while new theaters in central and northern Europe drew performers away from Italy.

Despite general acknowledgement of the historical importance of Venetian opera collectively, only a handful of Baroque operas are performed today. The reasons are many: the lack of survival of musical sources, the paucity of modern editions for works that survive, the expense of staging long, elaborate works of earlier times, and the lack of training in Baroque performing techniques in many potential venues.

The repertory as a corpus

Many studies of Venetian opera focus on a single work, or perhaps a small group of works related by a common subject (Artaxerxes was a popular one) or a single composer (e.g., Legrenzi or Pollarolo) or a single theater (e.g. San Salvatore, also called San Luca in the context of comedy). By considering almost 900 works from a single century together, we can trace dozens of rich strands of data in clusters that are rarely acknowledged.

Almost every production included here has a verified exact date of opening (a sorting date). Sorting dates for titles are especially useful in calibrating other fields chronologically. On dating, see Dating Venetian Operas.

The 889 productions listed here consist largely of three-act drammi per musica. Details of the repertory as a whole were constantly shifting. The nature of the content in combination with precise dating information enables a wide range of approaches to interrogation. The century from 1660 to 1760 differs from adjacent segments of a longer chronology in ways that suggest the need for a slightly different range of fields from those displayed here. The 96 productions mounted between 1637 and 1659 involved fewer theaters, some traveling troupes, and a wide range of component items within works. The seasonal framework that stabilized in the 1660s enables use to evaluate elements of stability and change in ways that are not possible with sparser material. Elaborate prologues, which could involve separate casts and scenery, dominated some works. No system of patronage developed until the 1670s.

By the 1750s the status of the dramma per musica as a musical-literary genre was challenged by the rise of the opera buffa. Mainly Neapolitan, opera buffa won fans without the elaborate apparatus or complicated staging requirements of its serious rival. More and more audience members in Venice were from imperial precincts where stale formulas in dramatic plots were quickly eclipsed by the shorter, gayer content of these newer works. At the same time, the re-establishment of prose comedy, which was heavily dominated by Carlo Goldoni in the 1740s and 1750s, gave local audiences a range of choices. Goldoni's move to Paris in 1762 led to further fragmentation. The polemics of the "pamphlet wars" challenged the premises of opera in a noisy literary battle that spread from Paris to Venice.

Fields and filters

Despite the lack of musical familiarity today's public may have with titles from earlier times, a significant number of subjects recurred throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Yesterday's work was not as highly regarded as today's. Ironically, the quest for novelty may have been conducive to the growing practice of disguising revised works by supplying new titles.

Before the alliance of public opera (1637) dramas with the dramma per musica, the most conspicuous model of what became "opera" was found in Florentine court intermedi. They in turn were considered appropriate for festive occasions, especially royal weddings. Such festivities could continue for days or weeks and often included many incidental entertainments. Aristocratic family odysseys en route to a wedding could also be dotted with an array of entertainments at each stop.

About Venetian Opera Productions


Website design and management: Craig Sapp
Content: Eleanor Selfridge-Field


Background image on search page: Fold-out etching by Domenico Rossetti from the libretto of Berenice vendicativa (music by Domenico Freschi, text by Gio. Maria Rapparini) premiered at the Villa Contarini on 8 November 1680 (Venice, Ca' Goldoni). Alvise Contarini served as doge from 1676 to 1684. The grandiose staging involved more than 400 supernumeraries plus 20 choruses, two lions, two elephants, and sixteen horses—four for Berenice's chariot and a dozen to cart prisoners. News reports relate that this entertainment, lasting for two weeks, was abruptly terminated by the collapse of a storage room for the chariots, which caused the panicked horses underneath to destroy some of the main props.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/