Honour is satisfied

Alessandro Scarlatti wrote at least sixty operas but only one of the extant ones is a comedy; Il Trionfo dell’Onore which premiered in Naples in 1718.  Cunningly Scarlatti insisted on an Italian, rather than Neapolitan, libretto so it soon got productions further north.  It’s a piece of its time.  It had only just become allowable to produce operas that weren’t based on classical myth or history.  Even Cavalli’s most tongue in cheek works like Il Giasone had roots in the classics!  But here we have an opera whose characters are quite ordinary though clearly based on the typical types of the commedia dell’arte.

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Il Bajazet

Vivaldi’s pasticcio Il Bajazet was composed for carnival season 1635.  It sets an earlier libretto by Agostino Piovene concerning the defeat and capture of the Ottoman sultan Bajazet (Bayezid I) by the Tartar leader Tamerlano (Timur) in 1403.  Tamerlano is contracted to marry the Princess of Trebizond, Irene, but falls for Bajazet’s daughter Asteria to the consternation of his Greek ally Andronico who is in love with Asteria.  Various plot twists and turns happen before Bajazet poisons himself, Tamerlano marries Irene after all and Asteria returns to Andronico.  Andronico also has a sidekick Idaspe.

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An operatic triptych

Resphigi’s 1931 work Maria Egiziaca was originally conceived as a concert work but very early on it became more common to perform it fully staged.  That’s how it’s presented in a production earlier this year from Venice’s Teatro La Fenice though it actually took place in the smaller Teatro Maliban.  It’s quite a short work; a little over an hour, and as the composer’s description of it as a “symphonic triptych” suggests it takes place in three scenes.

1.boat

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