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Howard E. Smither - History of the Oratorio: Vol. 1 - The Oratorio in the Baroque Era: Italy, Vienna, Paris

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Howard E. Smither History of the Oratorio: Vol. 1 - The Oratorio in the Baroque Era: Italy, Vienna, Paris
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Howard Smither has written the first definitive work on the history of the oratorio since Arnold Schering published his Geschichte des Oratoriums in 1911. This volume is the first of a four-volume comprehensive study that offers a new synthesis of what is known to date about the oratorio. Volume 1, divided into three parts, opens with the examination of the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque antecedents and origins of the oratorio, with emphasis on Rome and Philip Neris Congregation of the Oratory and with special attention to the earliest works for which the term oratorio seems appropriate. The second part recounts the development of the oratorio in Italy, circa 1640-1720. It reviews the social contexts, patrons, composers, poets, librettos, and music of the oratorio in Italy, especially in Vienna and Paris. The procedure adapted throughout the work is to treat first the social context, particularly the circumstances of performance of the oratorio in a given area and period, then to treat the libretto, and finally the music. For each geographic area and period, the author has selected for special attention a few oratorios that appear to be particularly important or representative. He has verified the information offered in the specialized literature whenever possible by reference to the music or documents. In a number of areas, particular seventeenth-century Italy, in which relatively few previous studies have been undertaken or secondary sources have proven to be inadequate, the author has examined the primary sources in manuscript and printed formmusic, librettos, and documents of early oratorio history. Impressive research and intelligent integration of disparate elements make this complicated, diffuse subject both readable and accessible to the student of music. Volume 2, The Oratorio in the Baroque Era: Protestant Germany and England, and Volume 3, The Oratorio in the Classical Era, continue and expand the study of oratorio history. Although this series was originally announced as a three-volume study, Smither will conclude with a fourth volume. This new workthe first English-language study of the history of the oratorio will become the standard work on its subject and an enduring contribution to music and scholarship.

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A History of the Oratorio

A History of the Oratorio
VOLUME 1

THE ORATORIO IN THE BAROQUE ERA
Italy Vienna Paris

by Howard E. Smither

The University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill Music Examples by Helen - photo 1

The University of North Carolina Press
Chapel Hill

Music Examples by Helen Jenner

1977 by The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America

02 01 00 99 98 8 7 6 5 4

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

Smither, Howard E.
A history of the oratorio.

Bibliography: v. 1, p.
CONTENTS: v. 1. The oratorio in the baroque era:
Italy, Vienna, Paris.
1. OratorioHistory and criticism. I. Title.
ML 3201.S6 782.8209 76-43980
ISBN 0-8078-1274-9

To my father and the memory of my mother

Contents
Illustrations
FIGURE
II-1.Ignatius of Loyola
II-2.Section of a 1593 map of Rome
II-3.St. Philip Neri
II-4.San Girolamo della Carit
II-5.The courtyard and entrance to SantOrsola della Piet
II-6.The Chiesa Nuova (Santa Maria in Vallicella) in 1593
II-7.Giovanni Animuccia
II-8.Title page of Giovanni Animuccias first book of laude
II-9.Agostino Manni
II-10.Title page of Giovenale Ancinas Tempio armonico (Rome, 1599)
II-11.The lauda Anima mia, che pensi?
III-1.Title page of Emilio de Cavalieris Rappresentatione di Anima et di Corpo (Rome, 1600)
III-2.Two pages from Cavalieris Rappresentatione 85
III-3.Title page of Paolo Quagliatis Affetti amorosi spirituali (Rome, 1617)
III-4.Beginning of Quagliatis dialogue Quando sar quel giorno from his Affetti
III-5.Title page of Giovanni Francesco Anerios Teatro armonico spirituale di madrigali (Rome, 1619)
III-6.Beginning of G. F. Anerios Dialogo della conversione di San Paolo from his Teatro 39
IV-1.Pope Urban VIII
IV-2.Cardinal Antonio Barberini
IV-3.Pope Alexander VII
IV-4.The Chiesa Nuova and its adjoining oratory
IV-5.Girolamo Rosini
IV-6.Title page of Domenico Mazzocchis Musiche sacre e morali (Rome, 1640)
IV-7.Title page and dedication of Pietro Della Valles Dialogo for the feast of the Purification
IV-8.Beginning of Della Valles Dialogo
IV-9.Francesco Balducci
IV-10.Beginning of Marco Marazzolis oratorio for the Resurrection
IV-11.Beginning of Giuseppe, attributed to Luigi Rossi
V-1.Detail from a 1593 map of Rome
V-2.The German College and its church of SantApollinare
V-3.Table of contents of a late seventeenth-century French copy of some sacred Latin works by Carissimi
V-4.Beginning of Carissimis Jephte
V-5.Beginning of Marazzolis Latin oratorio Erat quidem languidus
VI-1.Cardinal Benedetto Pamphilj
VI-2.The Clementine College and the Ripetta Port on the Tiber
VI-3.Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni
VI-4.A stage design by Filippo Juvarra for an oratorio performance in the grand salon of the Cancelleria
VI-5.A stage design by Juvarra for an oratorio performance in the theater of the Cancelleria
VI-6.The stage machine for the prologue of the Componimento sacro per la festivit del SS. Natale (Rome, 1727)
VI-7.The appearance of the stage after the prologue represented in Figure VI6
VII-1.Title page of Archangelo Spagnas Oratorii (Rome, 1706)
VII-2.Giovanni Legrenzi
VII-3.Title page of the libretto for the Modena performance in 1688 of Alessandro Stradellas San Giovanni Battista
VII-4.A page from a manuscript of Stradellas San Giovanni Battista
VII-5.Title page of the libretto for the Modena performance in 1686 of Giovanni Paolo Colonnas Ill Mos
VII-6.Alessandro Scarlatti
VII-7.George Frideric Handel
VII-8.Antonio Vivaldi
VII-9.Antonio Caldara
VIII-1.The Hapsburg emperor Leopold I
VIII-2.Interior of the Hofburgkapelle in Vienna
VIII-3.Title page of Giovanni Valentinis oratorio libretto of 1643
VIII-4.Watercolor sketch by Ludovico Ottaviano Burnacini of his scenic design for Antonio Draghis sepolcro entitled Il sagrificio non impedito (1692)
VIII-5.Apostolo Zeno
VIII-6.Title page of Zenos Poesie sacre (Venice, 1735)
VIII-7.Pietro Metastasio
VIII-8.Title page of the libretto for the performance in 1687 of Draghis Jephte
VIII-9.Beginning of Draghis Jephte
VIII-10.Johann Joseph Fux
Music Examples

Examples covered by copyright are printed with the permission of the publishers cited below and with modifications as indicated:

II-1.Lauda, Anima mia che pensi?Anon. 64
II-2.Lauda, Nellapparir del sempiterno SoleSoto 66
II-3.Lauda, Il pietoso GiesSoto
II-4.Lauda, Solo e pensosoSoto 69
III-1.Rappresentatione di Anima et di Corpo-Cavalieri 88
III-2.Dialogue, Dal pi sublime regnoCifra
III-3.Dialogue, O tu che vaiG. F. Anerio
III-4.Dialogue, Quando sar quel giornoQuagliati
III-5.Dialogue, In illo temporeAgazzari
III-6.Dialogue, Domine, si fuisses hicDonati
III-7.Dialogue, Die mihi sacratissima VirgoCapello
III-8III-10.Dialogo dellAnima, [San Michele, e lAngelo Custode]G. F. Anerio 31
III-11.Dialogo del Figliuol ProdigoG. F. Anerio (Fratelli Bocca, Milan. Soprano clef changed to G clef; time values reduced to one-half their original lengths in sections with C signatures and one-fourth in those with 3 signatures; figures moved from above to below the b. c.)
III-12III-13.Dialogo di DavidG. F. Anerio 37
III-14III-15.Dialogo della Conversione di San PaoloG. F. Anerio 42
IV-1.Coro di profeti, Verginelle festeggiante D. Mazzocchi
IV-2.Coro di profeti, Ecco BettuliaD. Mazzocchi
IV-3.Per la festa della Purificatione: DialogoDelia
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