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- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu!velde2
- From: velde2@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu (Francois Velde)
- Subject: Re: male alti, counter-tenors, castrati, and so on
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.150355.24969@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu>
- Organization: HAC - Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
- References: <1992Dec23.012124.25043@news.cs.brandeis.edu>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 15:03:55 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <1992Dec23.012124.25043@news.cs.brandeis.edu> jacob@max.cc.brandeis.edu ( ) writes:
- >
- >3. how (to what purpose?) did castrati start to become "available"
- > in italy around 1600?
-
- To sing sacred music?
-
- > clearly the answer cannot be "to sing opera"
- > as opera was just begining. for example the role of nero in monteverdi's
- > "incoronazione," one of the first operas, was to be sung by a castrato
- > (unless it was sung by a woman which i believe was not the case,) so
- > for monteverdi to write such a part, singers able to sing that part must
- > have been *already* available. on the other hand neither madrigals nor
- > masses require castrati, so?
-
- I don't know if masses or motets *require* castrati, but they sure can use them.
-
- > (note that the "production" of castrati was *always* a fairly illegal
- > affair in all of italy -- read the excerpt from burney in strunk's book --
- > in other words opera 1600-1800 rested on a very illegal activity,
- > punishable by death in some cases, a bit like if the major popular
- > music stars of this era were, say, all children who'd been kidnapped and
- > sold in slavely)
-
- Might have been illegal (under whose law?) but the Pope's own chapel was
- stocked with castrati for centuries.
-
- Related question: what did a castrato sound like: a soprano or a countertenor?
- --
-
- Francois Velde
-
-