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Obscure composers (2) (link to part 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 ) San Carlo
Domenico Sarro
(1679-1744). The San Carlo theater opened on The first season also featured La
Clemenza di Tito by Leonardo Leo
and L’olimpiade by Nicolò Porpora (below). All
of the operas featured
in the first season had one thing in common: they had libretti by the
same
person—Metastasio, the greatest
librettist (and probably greatest Italian poet)
of the 1700s. His libretti were ubiquitous in Italian opera in that
century and
any single work of his might be done and redone by many musicians. His
libretto, La Clemenza di Tito, for
example, was set to music by about 40 composers (!), including Mozart (in 1791).
(This means that your version, mine, and that of poor Leonardo Leo
might not
stand the test of time.) Nicolò Porpora (1686-1768)
probably shouldn’t be on this list. Again, I plead ignorance. He was a
vocal
coach and music teacher to the great castrato, Farinelli.
Porpora
travelled
widely and was active and well received in Gaetano
Latillo ( 1711-1788)
crops up at
San Carlo in the 1740s with his Adriano
in Siria and Zenobia. Latillo was
born in Indeed, opera in Naples in the last half of the 1700s is
dominated by Piccinni and then Paisiello,
and Cimarosa. Names that are no longer
familiar to non-specialists, but whose works appeared at San Carlo in
that period,
include Baldassarre Galuppi (1706-1785),
a Venetian and the composer of a number of instrumental sonatas as well
as many operas; Davide Puca
(1711-1778), whose opera Artaserse,
Alessandro, and Tito Manlio were performed at San
Carlo; and Nicola Sala
(1713-1801), a composer and teacher at the Pietà dei Turchini conservatory for sixty years. [page background graphic by Fulvio Tortora] back to index ( to part 1 part 3 part 4 part 5 part 6 part 7 part 8 ) |