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1600 Opera/oratorio by Emilio de' Cavalieri From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rappresentatione di anima et di corpo (Italian for Portrayal of the Soul and the Body) is a musical work by Emilio de' Cavalieri to a libretto by Agostino Manni (1548–1618). With it, Cavalieri regarded himself as the composer of the first opera or oratorio. Whether he was actually the first is subject to some academic debate, as is whether the work is better categorized as an opera or an oratorio. It was first performed in Rome in February 1600 in the Oratorio dei Filippini adjacent to the church of Santa Maria in Vallicella.[1]
Rappresentatione di anima et di corpo | |
---|---|
opera/oratorio by Emilio de' Cavalieri | |
Librettist | Agostino Manni |
Language | Italian |
Premiere | February 1600 Oratorio dei Filippini, Rome |
It was imagined during the Renaissance, almost certainly incorrectly, that Greek drama was sung, not declaimed, and that therefore opera was a revival of ancient practice. On 10 November 1600 Emilio de Cavalieri wrote a letter arguing that he, not Jacopo Peri, was the true reviver of Greek style acting with singing, i.e. opera. Peri later deferred to him in the preface to the published version of Euridice in 1601. (Euridice had received its first performance in October 1600). The music historian Joachim Steinheuer comments that Cavalieri was a pioneer of "recitation in singing or 'recitar cantando'"; this type of declamation was a major innovation in enabling the introduction of extended dramatic monologues and dialogues, as required in opera.[2]
Since the Rappresentatione is fully staged, in three acts with a spoken prologue, it can be considered to be the earliest surviving opera.[3]
There are modern editions of the "opera":
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