Unit 7: Verdi and La traviata Flashcards
Dates
1813-1901
Family Background and Education
Born in Italy
Father was a tavern-keeper who valued education
Began lessons with Porvesi, a church musician
Moved to Busseto to live in the home of Barezzi, a wealthy merchant
Life and Musical Career
Married Barezzi’s daughter, Margherita
Returned to Milan where he achieved his first major success with his opera Oberto
Became involved in the rising tide of Italian nationalism
Musical Style and Contributions
Acknowledged as the greatest Italian composer of opera in the 19th century
Influences range from opera seria to opera buffa
Librettos selected for dramatic possibilities and human elements: love, passion, fate, courage
Ten of his operas are based on librettos by Piave
La traviata: Genre
Opera
La traviata: Language
Italian
La traviata: Structure
Three acts
V: opera
Drama that is sung
Combines music, drama, visual arts, and often dance
Components include recitatives, arias, ensembles, and choruses
Created in Italy 1600 and remains popular today
V: recitative
A speech-like style of singing used in operas, oratorios, or cantats
Follows inflections of the text, resulting in rhythmic flexibility
Usually used to advance the plot
V: aria
Italian for “air”
A solo song with orchestral accompaniment heard in an opera, oratorio, or cantata
Highly emotional, often virtuosic
Often serves to reveal the characters’ most intimate emotions
V: bel canto
Italian for “beautiful singing”
A style used in early 19-century operas
Demonstrated in the works of early Verdi
Emphasized purity of tone and lyrical melodies of a highly ornamented nature
V: libretto
The text of an opera, oratoria, or cantata
Usually written by someone other than the composer
Writer of the libretto is referred to as the librettist
V: ensemble
A musical number in an opera featuring any number of soloists, but generally a group smaller than a chorus
serves as a climax
Each person expresses their emotions directly to the audience
V: coloratura soprano
Italian for “coloring”
A high female voice capable of singing florid lines in an extended range, demanding great agility and often creating virtuosic effects