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The Marqués, the Divas, and the Castrati: Gaspar de Haro y Guzmán and Opera in the Early Modern Spanish Orbit

Autor Louise K. Stein
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 sep 2024
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.During a crucial period in opera's development as a genre and as a business, the flamboyantly libertine Spanish aristocrat Gaspar de Haro y Guzmán (1629-87), Marqués de Heliche and del Carpio, influenced operatic practices and productions for both Italian and Hispanic operas. A voracious collector of books and antiquities and famed connoisseur of visual art, the marqués financed operas in both Spain and Italy and further shaped them through his ideas, energy, and politics. His legacy also brought forth the first operas of the Americas, as posthumous revivals of the operatic genres he nurtured appeared in the Americas less than fifteen years after his death. In this book, author Louise K. Stein follows the trajectory of this first operatic producer to have shaped opera in two different worlds--Europe and the Americas--and in doing so, advances our musical and historical understanding of seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century opera and cultural encounter.Each chapter focuses on different productions spearheaded by the Marqués in Madrid, Rome, and Naples during his lifetime, with the final chapter considering how his influence continued in operatic productions in Lima, Mexico City, and other regions of New Spain after his death. Alongside this portrait of the distinguish patron of the arts, Stein shows how conventions of musical dramaturgy for both private and commercial opera were developed within a consistent politics of production across the far-flung administrative centers of the Spanish empire in the years 1650-1730. She reveals the place of opera within the siglo de oro (Golden Age) of Hispanic theatre and delves deeply into how the Marqués became the principal patron of Alessandro Scarlatti in Italy after his time in Rome, sparking a reliable production system for Italian opera in Naples. Stein also addresses gendered performance--how beliefs about female fertility conditioned listeners and shaped the operatic genre--and advances the concept of the "womanly voice" in the first extant Hispanic operas, the Italian operas produced in Naples between 1683 and 1687, and the first operas of the Americas from 1701 to 1730.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197681848
ISBN-10: 0197681840
Pagini: 792
Ilustrații: 83 music examples, 46 figures, 13 tables
Dimensiuni: 155 x 229 x 36 mm
Greutate: 1.11 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

In her book on diplomat and entrepreneur Marquis del Carpio, Louise Stein presents in detail the career of a man who deeply influenced the development of opera in seventeenth-century Madrid, Rome, Naples, Peru, and Mexico. With meticulous research, brilliant cultural insights, deft musical analysis, and lively prose, our foremost scholar of Hispanic Baroque music sets the stage for dozens of new projects.
Because music was so central to politics in the Baroque era, musicology is the crucial tool for unveiling new perspectives on theatre and opera as diplomacy across Europe and the Americas in the seventeenth century. Within a clear and beautiful narrative, musicologist Louise Stein combines a deep knowledge of sources and a vast historiography spanning modern history, book history, visual arts, and theatre studies from the three very different traditions of Spanish, Italian, and Anglo-American scholarship. This book presents a renewed vision of a polymath patron whose mastery of music and voices illuminates an entire age and several closely-linked worlds.

Notă biografică

Louise K. Stein is Professor of Musicology, Medieval and Early Modern Studies, and Latin American Studies at the University of Michigan. She has contributed critical editions of the first opera of the Americas, La púrpura de la rosa (1999) and the first extant Spanish opera, Celos aun del aire matan (2014). Her first book Songs of Mortals, Dialogues of the Gods: Music and Theatre in Seventeenth-Century Spain (OUP 1993) received the First Book Prize from the Society for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies. In 1996, she was awarded the Noah Greenberg Award by the American Musicological Society for distinguished contributions to the study and performance of early music.