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This widely praised publication of the work of a key figure in the history of opera provides the most reliable version of the score for each opera, appending a translation of the libretto. La Statira is the ninth opera available in the edition, which is under the general editorship of Donald Jay Grout. La Statira was first performed in Rome in January 1690, to inaugurate the carnival season for that year. The opera, with libretto by Cardinal Ottoboni, recounts the story of Alexander the Great's defeat of Darius, King of Persia, and his love for Statira, daughter of Darius. Alexander's bravery and magnanimity were favorite subjects of operatic librettists in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In his introduction William Holmes sketches the opera's history and discusses performance questions. William C. Holmes is Professor of Music, University of California, Irvine. Operas already available: , i>Eraclea, Marco Attilio Regolo, Griselda, The Faithful Princess, Massimo Puppieno, La Caduta de Decemviri, Gli Equivoci nel Sembiante, and Tigrane.
William C. Holmes provides a rare look behind the scenes into the
world of early eighteenth-century Italian opera. Based on a rich
store of newly recovered documents, mainly the personal papers of
Luca Casimiro degli Albizzi, this social history illuminates the
complexities of staging opera in the 1720s and '30s: the role of
the impresario in planning an operatic season, financial and
artistic difficulties, the importance of patronage, the power of
individual singers and composers, considerations of set design, and
the practice of altering librettos.
William C. Holmes provides a rare look behind the scenes into the
world of early eighteenth-century Italian opera. Based on a rich
store of newly recovered documents, mainly the personal papers of
Luca Casimiro degli Albizzi, this social history illuminates the
complexities of staging opera in the 1720s and '30s: the role of
the impresario in planning an operatic season, financial and
artistic difficulties, the importance of patronage, the power of
individual singers and composers, considerations of set design, and
the practice of altering librettos.
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