Il Giustino | |
---|---|
Opera by Giovanni Legrenzi | |
Librettist | Nicolò Beregan |
Premiere |
Il Giustino is an opera in three acts by composer Giovanni Legrenzi. The work uses an Italian-language libretto by Nicolò Beregan based on the life of Emperor Justin I. The opera premiered on 7 February 1683 at the Teatro San Salvador in Venice.[1]
Background and performance history
Considered one of Legrenzi's finest compositions, the work includes more than 70 arias.[2] The opera tells the story of Giustino's rise from the position of a simple poor farmer to being crowned the Byzantine Emperor.[3] For several decades following its 1683 premiere at the Teatro San Salvador, Il Giustino was one of the most widely performed Venetian operas. According to musicologist Reinhard Strohm, its music was still being discussed as late as 1720 in Benedetto Marcello's pamphlet Il teatro alla moda.[4]
On 26 April 2007, Il Giustino had its first modern revival at the Schwetzingen Festival in a production directed by Nicolas Brieger with set designer Katrin Nettrod and costume designer Jorge Jara.[5] Musicologist and conductor Thomas Hengelbrock prepared the performance score for the production, and also led the Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble in performances of the work.[3] Soprano Elisabeth Kulman led the cast in the title role of Giustino, with Georg Nigl as Ariannas, Cornelia Ptassek as Arianna, Terry Wey as Andronico/Flavia, Delphine Galou as Eufemia, Peter Kennel as Vitaliano, and Hermann Oswald as Amantio.[5][6]
Roles
Role[7] | Voice type |
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Emperor Anastasio | soprano |
Empress Arianna | soprano |
Giustino | soprano |
Eufemia | soprano |
Vitaliano | contralto |
Andronico | soprano |
Amanzio | tenor |
Polimante | bass |
Erasto capitano | bass |
Brillo | bass |
Ombra di Vitaliano | bass |
Atlante | bass |
Venere | soprano |
Imeneo | mezzo-soprano |
Fortuna | soprano |
Allegrezza | soprano |
Gloria | soprano |
Eternità | contralto |
References
- ↑ Eleanor Selfridge-Field (2007). A New Chronology of Venetian Opera and Related Genres, 1660–1760. Stanford University Press. p. 159.
- ↑ Jon Paxman (2014). A Chronology of Western Classical Music 1600-2000. Omnibus Press. p. 109. ISBN 9781783231218.
- 1 2 Horst Koegler (August 2007). "Germany: Schwetzingen". Opera. p. 39.
- ↑ Strohm, Reinhard (2005). "Vivaldi and Handel's Settings of Giustino", pp. 132–133. Music and Theatre: Essays in Honour of Winton Dean. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521619289
- 1 2 "Il Giustino". Opernwelt. Vol. 48. 2007. p. 3.
- ↑ "Schwetzingen Opens With Legrenzi". giornaledellamusica.it. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
- ↑ Nicolò Beregan; Giovanni Legrenzi. Dario Zanotti (ed.). Il Giustino (PDF) (in Italian). Retrieved 25 October 2023 – via librettidopera.it.
External links
- Media related to Giustino (Legrenzi) at Wikimedia Commons
- Giustino (Legrenzi): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project