(HD) Pergolesi: La Serva Padrona, intermezzo in two parts | Diego Fasolis & Barocchisti

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  • Playlist: • Giovanni Battista Perg...
    • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi: La Serva Padrona, intermezzo in two parts
    Part 1:
    02:35 • Aria: Aspettare e non venire ~ Uberto
    04:16 • Recitativo: Questa e per me disgrazia! ~ Uberto, Serpina
    07:52 • Aria: Sempre in contrasti ~ Uberto
    11:27 • Recitativo: In somma delle somme ~ Serpina, Uberto
    13:02 • Aria: Stizzoso, mio stizzoso! ~ Serpina
    16:29 • Recitativo: Benissimo! ~ Uberto, Serpina
    18:38 • Duetto: Lo conosco ~ Serpina, Uberto
    Part 2:
    23:03 • Recitativo: Or che fatto ~ Serpina, Uberto
    26:38 • Aria: A Serpina penserete ~ Serpina
    29:50 • Recitativo: Ah, quanto mi fa male ~ Uberto, Serpina
    31:52 • Aria: Son imbrogliato io gia ~ Uberto
    36:03 • Recitativo: Favorisca, Signor ~ Serpina, Uberto
    39:40 • Duetto: Per te io ho nel core ~ Serpina, Uberto
    42:35 • Contento tu sarai! ~ Serpina, Uberto
    • Umberto: Furio Zanasi
    • Serpina: Sonya Yoncheva
    • Vespone: Roberto Carlos Gerboles
    • Tafano: Pablo Ariel Bursztin
    I Barocchisti
    Conducted by Diego Fasolis
    Directed by Mando Bernardinello ® 2008 - Broadcast by HD Suisse
    __
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 253

  • @Just_Sara327
    @Just_Sara327 Před rokem +24

    È Semplicemente stupendo!
    La mia opera cantata preferita, e pensare che ha più di 300 anni! È incredibile quanto una storia scritta così tanto tempo fa sia ancora così bella😁

  • @danielacirelli761
    @danielacirelli761 Před 7 lety +87

    Mai vista una rappresentazione così egregia e raffinata de la Serva Padrone, esalta alla grande le magiche note di Pergolesi

  • @rorycoker6601
    @rorycoker6601 Před 4 lety +22

    This opera hit the Paris of Rameau like a thunderbolt, touching off a debate that lasted for decades. (1) It was short. (2) it was genuinely funny. (3) and most important, all the characters were ordinary people. No Greek or Roman gods, no legendary heroes, etc.

  • @alexandredocarmojr5156
    @alexandredocarmojr5156 Před 8 lety +32

    A M A Z I N G PE R F E C T .. I JUST FALL IN LOVE WITH THOSE VOICES

  • @simonequondamantonio5539
    @simonequondamantonio5539 Před 9 lety +12

    Furio.... mamma mia che voce!!! Una voce chiara e limpida da baritono, morbida.... e poi nel
    registro medio grave e in quello grave imbrunisce naturalmente... con dei gravi degni di un basso.
    Bellissimo timbro, fantastico!!!!! =)

  • @gerboroca
    @gerboroca Před 10 lety +82

    Felice di aver condiviso il palco con questi bravi artisti… ci siamo divertiti, bei ricordi…

    • @patcucciola
      @patcucciola  Před 10 lety +21

      Un onore la sua presenza qua. Grazie a lei e agli altri artisti per questo capolavoro.

    • @gahualli
      @gahualli Před 8 lety +9

      +Roberto Gerboles tu sei favoloso!!! :))

    • @gerboroca
      @gerboroca Před 8 lety +10

      Grazie di cuore a tutti!!, è stato un bel lavoro!! Grazie!!

    • @antoniopet
      @antoniopet Před 8 lety +5

      +Roberto Gerboles Grande, complimenti!

    • @carlobrayda2951
      @carlobrayda2951 Před 7 lety +4

      Roberto Gerboles - bravissimi!

  • @Grzegorz1972
    @Grzegorz1972 Před 3 lety +5

    Che bella la voce di baritono. Bravissimo

  • @albcaval
    @albcaval Před 6 měsíci +1

    Sapevamo tutti che La Serva Padrona era un capolavoro. Con Fasolis e gli altri protagonisti di questa meravigliosa rappresentazione abbiamo capito perché!

  • @alessandrochisci1517
    @alessandrochisci1517 Před 3 lety +19

    Mi piace che come nel sottofondo di ogni scena c’è tafano che mangia la ciabatta con mortadella

  • @panchogallegomartinez5179
    @panchogallegomartinez5179 Před 4 lety +14

    I met Sonya Yoncheva, many years ago, thank this performance. I fell in loving with her voice and I and I knew she was destined to be a great star. So it was

  • @luigigramolini7448
    @luigigramolini7448 Před 7 měsíci +13

    Ciao sono una ragazza di 13 anni mi piace tanto quest' opera
    Oggi sono andata a teatro a vedere l opera dal vivo con a scuola
    È un esperienza da vivere davvero molto bella appena a scola ne abbiamo parlato ho voluto subito approfondire e ho trovato questo
    È sempliceme FANTASTICA 🤩🤩🤩🤩

  • @simonequondamantonio5539
    @simonequondamantonio5539 Před 10 lety +28

    He is a baritone and can sing as a basso buffo... simply fantastic!!!

  • @CarmillaWilde
    @CarmillaWilde Před 10 lety +16

    Sonya est fantastique, comme toujours... brillante, charmante, avec un timbre absolument délicieux.

  • @frandsenphilip1
    @frandsenphilip1 Před 10 lety +52

    Can't believe I've never heard this opera before - it's great!!

    • @novagerio9244
      @novagerio9244 Před 3 lety +8

      It's one of the absolutely greatest jewels of the Neapolitan School. And Yoncheva is delightful here, in her real Fach.

    • @shodanart
      @shodanart Před 2 lety +1

      @@novagerio9244 sues. A gem she is. ❤️

  • @antonioscaravilli219
    @antonioscaravilli219 Před 8 lety +11

    Esecuzione eccellente da ogni punto di vista.Fasolis ha saputo imprimere il suo marchio,assecondato dai due superbi interpreti.

  • @Virginia14791
    @Virginia14791 Před 10 lety +21

    Cantanti e orchestra meravigliosi, direzione e regia eccellenti!

  • @musiqueblere5970
    @musiqueblere5970 Před rokem +5

    Musique sublime, orchestre et chanteurs fantastiques et mise en scène pétillante d'inventivité ... quel spectacle !!!!

  • @PlantmanLu
    @PlantmanLu Před 11 lety +12

    Musica extraordinária. Bela e soberba Serpina. Ai se Pergolesi não tivesse abandonado tão cedo o mundo dos vivos ...

  • @visviri6647
    @visviri6647 Před rokem

    Bella l'impronta della radiotelevisione svizzera! Desumibile in ogni secondo di questo video! Bello!

  • @concentusxl
    @concentusxl Před 10 lety +18

    Realizzazione scenica di gran classe del celebre Intermezzo di Pergolesi. Non si potrà mai dire abbastanza bene di questa proposta di patcucciola !!

  • @albcaval
    @albcaval Před 6 měsíci +1

    It was well known that the Serva Padrona by Pergolesi is a masterpiece. With the Fasolis and coworkers interpretation we understand why!

  • @minuciofelice6465
    @minuciofelice6465 Před 3 měsíci

    Splendore! Grazie! 👏👏👏👏👏

  • @Caeliusrufus
    @Caeliusrufus Před 5 lety +6

    Lovely, just lovely. An absolutely perfect jewel of an opera.

  • @shodanart
    @shodanart Před 2 lety +7

    13:00 Beautiful Sonya Yoncheva sings with the most alluring expressions. Lovely acting! She’s such doll! ❤️💔🎶💔
    At 22:13 I’m hooked…Poor Uberto’s a bit slow, because I think I’d take less convincing to do what she says! lol
    26:39 Serpina’s expression is priceless, as she works her delightful feminine charms’
    38:54 At last! 39:10 Such darling theatrics and 39:20 wily expressions!
    39:43 delightful Baroque passage
    Furio Zamasi an excellent Umberto.
    Love the closing duet!
    Don’t you think the two extras were more of a distraction?
    Just a thought.

  • @atmplayspiano
    @atmplayspiano Před 10 lety +4

    This opera must have taken the spotlight from whatever it was used as an intermezzo for. That ending, oh my god.

  • @teutaribstein8942
    @teutaribstein8942 Před 7 lety +6

    Formidables musiciens et belle production !!! Bravo......

  • @razdoburdina
    @razdoburdina Před 11 lety +7

    Tout le monde est magnifique! Surtout elle! Bravissima Serpina!

  • @Hermes1548
    @Hermes1548 Před 6 lety +2

    Sonya Yoncheva made me believe this opera buffa
    was for adults, not for children. She's Magic.

  • @LTCantyInc
    @LTCantyInc Před 8 lety +6

    I loved Sempre en contrasti! Such a well improvised version of the aria. Lots of movement and character.

  • @amazingsaint
    @amazingsaint Před 10 lety +46

    I can't speak Italian, and it's still funny!

    • @FreeSilio
      @FreeSilio Před 2 lety +1

      That's the magic of Opera Buffa. :-)

  • @acordeonistul79
    @acordeonistul79 Před 11 lety +1

    Minunata lucrare muzicala , superba interpretarea ...Felicitari .

  • @oleksandrakhmara646
    @oleksandrakhmara646 Před 4 lety +2

    Geniale!!!! Sono molto felice di ascoltare questa versione!!!! È il teatro vero e il canto bellissimo!! Grazie!

  • @TheOhsewon
    @TheOhsewon Před 2 lety +3

    13:03 serpina aria stizzoso

  • @PP-hh5rh
    @PP-hh5rh Před 4 lety

    Stupendi tutti!

  • @micheledipierri
    @micheledipierri Před 4 lety +3

    Meraviglioso

  • @maryness3316
    @maryness3316 Před 8 lety +9

    Troppo bella la parte di stizzoso mio stizzoso

  • @ellie9494
    @ellie9494 Před 8 lety +5

    che meraviglia!!! 💗

  • @thomaschigioni9370
    @thomaschigioni9370 Před 10 lety +3

    Meraviglioso!

  • @sirio9632
    @sirio9632 Před 11 lety +4

    e i musicisti. Musica pulitissima, vivace e spiritosa

  • @marchanjd
    @marchanjd Před 9 lety +2

    Je redécouvre cette oeuvre grâce à cette superbe interprétation. Merci

  • @danilobalestrieri8542
    @danilobalestrieri8542 Před 4 měsíci +1

    sonya yoncheva......stunning!!!!

  • @samuelreynard1839
    @samuelreynard1839 Před 8 lety +1

    Grazie mille per questa stupenda interpretazione !!!! Meraviglioso!

  • @andity1
    @andity1 Před 9 lety +9

    Both have great voices

  • @dorinvictorcristianciuc18

    Exceptionala reprezentatie !Merci beaucoup !

  • @riaandtheirstuff2098
    @riaandtheirstuff2098 Před 8 lety +3

    il Fasolone è il migliore!! io e la mia lasse abbiamo anche creato una fan page in suo onore su facebook dopo aver visto questo suo stupendo lavoro. complimenti al nostro grande direttore!!!

  • @Operamatt
    @Operamatt Před 9 lety +9

    Sonya Yoncheva is quite the looker as well as an excellent singer!

  • @ilresole603
    @ilresole603 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Genio italiano ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @giulianisimone3344
    @giulianisimone3344 Před 10 lety +1

    Bellissimo, grazie Patcucciola !

  • @JCNOS
    @JCNOS Před 8 lety +9

    Bravoo!! genial interpretacion de todos!! fabulosas voces y actuaciones.. felicitaciones!

  • @Ammazzadraghi
    @Ammazzadraghi Před 4 lety +14

    ammazza quanto è bòna la Yoncheva!!

    • @ZILLIALESSANDRO
      @ZILLIALESSANDRO Před 3 lety +2

      Condivido... ma l'ho vista prima io!!!! :)

    • @alessandrochisci1517
      @alessandrochisci1517 Před 3 lety +1

      Hahaha

    • @FreeSilio
      @FreeSilio Před 2 lety +1

      In questo duetto é sensualissima.
      Spoiler: si (intra)vedono le tette! :P
      czcams.com/video/oADm9_KUc1I/video.html

    • @Ammazzadraghi
      @Ammazzadraghi Před 2 lety +1

      @@FreeSilio beh, Poppea... :D

  • @talvela100
    @talvela100 Před 5 lety

    Bravi, bravi arci bravi!

  • @leodepuydt308
    @leodepuydt308 Před 7 lety +4

    Io sono bella, graziosa, spiritosa. When it comes the relations between men and women, it is somehow gratifying to know that they knew everything there was to know around 1730. Nothing has been added since then. Leo Depuydt

    • @satyricusm
      @satyricusm Před 2 lety

      Yes, and how much more delightful it is to learn that what they knew, was confirmed by classical sources.

  • @sacoripa
    @sacoripa Před 8 lety +4

    bravo ragazzi. voci fantastiche! fasolis e sonya yoncheva on top. danke an rsi: für solche produktionen bezahle ich gerne den billag-obulus nach lugano

  • @marfuco
    @marfuco Před 8 lety +3

    Maravilosa obra, la adoro

  • @elenaluna363
    @elenaluna363 Před 7 lety +1

    bravissimi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @DorianYarg
    @DorianYarg Před 4 lety +5

    The woman who plays the violin on the back ground has a a low-cut evening dress in this shot 39:45 but then at 39:56 she is wearing a a dress with long sleeves. How is it possible? I thought this was a live performance on theatre!

    • @matteobizzotto3496
      @matteobizzotto3496 Před 4 lety

      Lmao

    • @TheLOVEELINA
      @TheLOVEELINA Před 4 lety +1

      c'est un film pas du in live cela n'enlève rien au spectacle formidable

    • @aaronhilliker7566
      @aaronhilliker7566 Před 3 lety

      I don't see any difference between those two shots 🤔

    • @DorianYarg
      @DorianYarg Před 3 lety

      @@aaronhilliker7566 You should pay more attention then.

    • @DorianYarg
      @DorianYarg Před 3 lety

      @@TheLOVEELINA At a first sight, you shouldn't have thought so.

  • @shakes.dontknowwhatyergettin

    Her facial expressions are like heroin to me.

  • @JaneRoland
    @JaneRoland Před 10 lety +1

    Pergolesi urodził się 4 stycznia, tak jak ja :D
    Bardzo fajne wykonanie :)

  • @FrancescoGenovese
    @FrancescoGenovese Před 12 lety +3

    Brilliant, charming! Excellent singers, excellent musicians!

  • @franciscoespinozagamboa6490

    ...el inmenso talento del maestro Pergolesi que supo dejarnos tantas maravillosas obras a pesar de su corta existencia

  • @simonegiuliani7483
    @simonegiuliani7483 Před 11 lety +2

    Grazie a patcucciola, splendida musica e splendia interpretazione !

  • @tamarasergeevna9096
    @tamarasergeevna9096 Před 11 lety +3

    thank you,so beautiful and witty!

  • @koiny2009
    @koiny2009 Před 7 lety

    Bravissimi, voci splendide!

  • @micheledipierri
    @micheledipierri Před 4 lety +2

    Un grande plauso anche al misconosciuto librettista Gennaro Antonio Federico;
    quanta freschezza, quanta grazia, quanta arguzia !!!

  • @brunyate
    @brunyate Před 3 lety +1

    Does anyone know the source of the postlude sung by the two servants? Ah, I have answered my own question! It is a variant version of the finale, also by Pergolesi, but much more in the mode. An interesting solution to give it to the servants, even though we have to put up with far too many of their antics in the show itself.

  • @Rameez_Hassan
    @Rameez_Hassan Před 6 lety +1

    I need that
    Ha ha! Ce mu - tra îm- buf - na - ta

  • @unagondolaunremo
    @unagondolaunremo Před 11 lety +3

    bravi tutti!

  • @marfuco
    @marfuco Před 8 lety +2

    Me ancantaría ser música y estar en la orquesta tocando esta maravillosa obra, debe ser un agrado.

    • @gracielaslyricalchannel6076
      @gracielaslyricalchannel6076 Před 8 lety +1

      🎹🎼🎵🎵🎵si si lo es y lo se por que soy cantante :-)

    • @marfuco
      @marfuco Před 8 lety +1

      Graiela,qué bueno recibir tu comentario. Hace muchos años fui cantante y conocí esta obra maravillosa. Soy de Chile, ¿de dónde eres tú?

    • @gracielaslyricalchannel6076
      @gracielaslyricalchannel6076 Před 8 lety

      +Cristina Fuentes Ecuador

  • @tikitak9132
    @tikitak9132 Před 2 lety +2

    오페라 부파의 레치타티보는 매우빠르고 수다스럽기 때문에 노래라기보다 말에 가까운. 혼자 연주하는 레치타티보다 두 사람이 대사하는 형태로 연주되는 중창이 대부분. 최초의 오페라 부파 마님이된 하녀 (평범한 사람들의 일상적인 이야기를 재미나게 풀어냄)

  • @Migdal1971
    @Migdal1971 Před rokem

    che bella edizione :-)

  • @My-Dear
    @My-Dear Před 2 lety +2

    13:02

  • @geric6906
    @geric6906 Před 4 lety +1

    Brazil here 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷

  • @aysesoyer
    @aysesoyer Před 11 lety +1

    Great production, TY for sharing.

  • @ancamg
    @ancamg Před 11 lety +2

    WOW, thank you for uploading! Amazing production!

  • @philippeboisson2048
    @philippeboisson2048 Před 4 lety +2

    Formidable !!

  • @neonweeb6860
    @neonweeb6860 Před 3 lety +1

    Great composing by Giovan Battista Pergolesi

  • @SamuelStokesMusic
    @SamuelStokesMusic Před 11 lety +1

    Beautiful production!

  • @bernieh4844
    @bernieh4844 Před 4 lety +1

    First Pergolesi opera I've seen - now I'm add
    icted !!

  • @abraxasm4097
    @abraxasm4097 Před 7 lety +3

    Excuse my ignorance, but does anyone know where I can find this with English subtitles?

    • @MrRavina
      @MrRavina Před 7 lety +1

      ...en.wikisource.org/wiki/La_Serva_Padrona This is the best I found

    • @alessandrochisci1517
      @alessandrochisci1517 Před 3 lety

      Bielorussia yies u can fin dis in france fur 36722662637373737377pooounds

  • @patpierre7300
    @patpierre7300 Před rokem

    la musique avec classe et tenue

  • @leodepuydt308
    @leodepuydt308 Před 7 lety +1

    One may have to be Signed In to Google to read all about Pergolesi’s uniqueness. There are five (5) sections I-V to my CZcams posting. And since III comes in IIIa, IIIb, and IIIc, that is in effect seven (7) sections.
    ABOUT THE TRANSCENDENTAL UNIQUENESS OF PERGOLESI’S MUSIC:
    AN ESSAY (PART IIIb)
    _by_ Leo Depuydt
    _To the Memory of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778), André Ernest Modeste Grétry (1741-1813), and Jean le Rond D’Alembert (1717-1783), Unconditional Admirers and Lovers of the Eternal Pergolesi’s Music, Comrades-in-Arms_
    (_Continuation from Part IIIa_.)
    APPENDIX: SUPPORTING MATERIALS
    APPENDIX, SECTION Ib: Historical Notes on the Appreciation of Pergolesi’s Music (_continued_)
    This much about Pergolesi’s style. But what about his reputation? I select often cited testimonies by the great philosopher J.-J. Rousseau (1712-1778), the great mathematician and student of the physics of music, J. Le Rond D’Alembert (1717-1783), the great contemporary French composer J.-Ph. Rameau (1683-1764), and-who else-the eternal J. S. Bach (1685-1750) himself, none of them Italians by the way. There have been detractors, a number of Germans and some English, some bitter. Perhaps, at some point, someone will be able to find out what to make of it all.
    But before adducing the testimonies in question, a unique property of G. B. Pergolesi’s legacy may be pointed out. It appears that, of the compositions that have been attributed to him at one point or another, perhaps 80% or 90% are not by him. There is nothing anywhere close to it in the history of music.
    As regards the testimonies anticipated above, J.-J. Rousseau-who himself composed respectable music-called G. B. Pergolesi “inimitable (_inimitable_)” [9].
    All culminates, evidently, in G. B. Pergolesi’s _Stabat mater_, composed just before his death. The analogy has very often been made with W. A. Mozart’s (1756-1791) _Requiem_, which he composed on his deathbed. Did J.-J. Rousseau exaggerate when he called the opening duet of G. B. Pergolesi’s _Stabat mater_ “the most perfect and the most touching that has ever come from the pen of any musician”? [10]
    According to J. Le Rond D’Alembert, G. B. Pergolesi was the “Rafael of Italian music” [11].
    There was much discussion in the eighteenth century as to whether either French or Italian opera music was superior. In that regard, A. E. M. Grétry reports that J.-Ph. Rameau, this paragon of French music in the eighteenth century and the successor to the Italian-born French composer J.-B. Lully (1632-1687), confided to his friend the Reverend Arnaud when he was about 60 years old, that, if he were 30 years younger, he would travel to Italy and compose in the style of G. B. Pergolesi [12]. But he felt that he was too old for change. What about that for a confession?
    And then there is J. S. Bach. To my knowledge, the only work that he copied and adapted from another composer in full orchestration, and not just in a conversion for keyboard, is G. B. Pergolesi’s _Stabat mater_. A fitting tribute indeed. J. S. Bach schoolishly completes harmonies, adding the fourth note. But it is a matter of taste whether the result is an improvement.
    G. B. Pergolesi has been adduced above as 1) a metaphor for style, and then 2) for rediscovery, and then also 3) for excellence. But there is more. He also stands for the dawning of a new age and the arrival of modernity.
    The focus is on Naples, once the second(?) largest city of Europe and the world, a city still known for its vibrant music scene, as evidenced in a recent motion picture by the actor and director J. Turturro. Thousands and thousands (if not hundreds of thousands) of music manuscripts rest in the libraries of Naples and of several European capitals. It is a huge legacy that is only in recent decades is beginning to be rediscovered in earnest. The neglect is owed in great part to the fact that, since G. B. Pergolesi’s time, Naples and Italy’s Mezziogorno have known episodes of decline and neglect.
    There is much to be said for the notion that modern music came into its own in the early eighteenth century in Naples, finally completely moving away from the polyphony of the Renaissance, and G. B. Pergolesi was part of this new development. Polyphony has its masterworks. But to the modern ear, it has a certain otherworldly quality.
    The new Neapolitan style was known as the “sweet new style (_dolce stil nuovo_)”. G. B. Pergolesi surpassed all other composers in the practice of it. In contrast to some other composers, he for the most part avoids ostentation through the coloratura that is so well known from the vocal music of the baroque period. Indeed, a principal virtue of G. B. Pergolesi’s music is its simplicity-to the extent that many have been surprised how music that looks so simple on the page can sound so good when performed.
    The Neapolitan style was the beginning of a new era that stretches all the way to the present day. Music reached a new and final plateau and that is where it stayed. True, music later became more sophisticated in all kinds of ways pertaining to composition, performance, and instrumentation. But I do not believe that much of it clearly surpasses the Neapolitan style in beauty. What is more, music lost all its humor in the nineteenth century. Furthermore, protagonists do not at great length and spectacularly die in eighteenth century operas. That is a relief.
    The Neapolitan style still remains relatively less known in spite of the revival of recent decades. Accordingly, one comes upon statements here and there in various media by those who, when encountering it accidentally, are a little perplexed as to how they missed it.
    One limitation of the style in question is that its achievements are mostly in vocal music. Its contributions to instrumental music are limited. L(eonardo) Leo’s (1694-1744) six concertos for cello are an exception rather than the rule.
    This means that knowing Latin (for the sacred music) and Italian (for the secular music), sometimes the Neapolitan dialect of Italian for comedic operas (_opera buffa_), much increases the appreciation of the music in question, and especially of G. B. Pergolesi’s music.
    The language factor may form a bit of a barrier and prevent the music in question from breaking out from a certain niche.
    And evidently, to appreciate G. B Pergolesi’s sacred music, it is necessary to realize that it is very, very Catholic.
    In higher learning, it is always enlightening to know who influenced whom. By analogy, in the quest for an appreciation of G. B. Pergolesi’s style, it helps to listen to those that were close to him in place, time, and person, those three main coordinates of the human condition. Just two striking anecdotes.
    Ch. Burney transmits the following first anecdote. As a rebellious 14-year old who had just mastered the traditional fine points of composing, G. B. Pergolesi wanted his friends to take him home so “that he might indulge his own fancies, and write such Music as was most agreeable to his natural perceptions and feelings” and that “[t]he instant he quitted the conservatorio, he totally changed his style, and adopted the style of [L(eonardo)] Vinci [(1690-1730)] . . . and of [J. A.] Hasse [(1699-1783)]” [13].
    L. Vinci, the first great master of the _dolce stil nuovo_, is to be distinguished from L. da Vinci (1452-1519), he of the Mona Lisa, who may have been distantly related I read somewhere. The anecdote explains something about G. B. Pergolesi’s unique originality.
    L. Vinci died in 1730, perhaps poisoned, just when G. B. Pergolesi began composing, and could not have been influenced by him. I refrain from detailing reports that J. A. Hasse, who composed prolifically both before and after G. B. Pergolesi’s short creative life (1730-1736), changed his style after becoming acquainted with G. B Pergolesi’s music.
    A special case is L(eonardo) Leo (1694-1744). He comes closest in style in many ways to G. B. Pergolesi. He ain’t G. B. Pergolesi. But still, his music constantly pleases and it exhibits many, many moments of exceptional beauty and simplicity combined. Music reached a pinnacle in early eighteenth century (early _settecento_) Naples. Has this pinnacle ever truly been surpassed?
    A second anecdote is as follows. G. B. Pergolesi admired his older contemporary L. Leo as a mentor. L. Leo may have been the first to truly master counterpoint, I read somewhere, but I leave that to musicologists. I see one more possible indication of a new age dawning. According to one account, G. B. Pergolesi invited L. Leo to a performance of his Mass in F, upon completion of which L. Leo warmly and openly embraced him and highly praised him [14] [15]. Once familiar with G. B. Pergolesi’s style, L. Leo began imitating it, like other older Neapolitan composers, sometimes copying him almost note by note [16]. L. Leo was once famous all over Europe. How many have heard of him nowadays? Still, there has been a little bit of a revival.
    (_Continued in Part IIIc._)

  • @trevormurphy9474
    @trevormurphy9474 Před 7 lety +101

    I didn't know Voldemort was a conductor too

  • @rachsky1224
    @rachsky1224 Před 4 lety +2

    Perché le arie sono in playback e I recitativi no?

  • @Anita-lx7df
    @Anita-lx7df Před 10 lety +1

    In questa interpretazione manca il duetto "Per te io ho nel core". E' presente solo il duetto della versione originale "Contento tu sarai". Bella interpretazione. Grazie

    • @kiraleskirales2371
      @kiraleskirales2371 Před 10 lety +1

      è dopo i titoli di coda.

    • @F93HD2
      @F93HD2 Před 2 měsíci

      Il duetto "Per te io ho nel core" e' stato scritto nel 1735 da Pergolesi per l' opera Il Flaminio ed era usanza che durante tutto il 1700 venisse eseguito al posto di "Contento tu sarai" che siamo solitamente abituati ad ascoltare a conclusione di questo intermezzo buffo dell' opera Il prigionier superbo sempre su libretto del Federico.

  • @joyjoyaghon2836
    @joyjoyaghon2836 Před 3 lety +1

    What is the title?
    Who is the composer?
    What is the style of opera?
    Storyline?

    • @ushgreta440
      @ushgreta440 Před 3 lety +1

      "serva padrona" 2.Giovan Battista Pergolesi 3.Opera buffa, it's an intermezzo 4. Serpina wants to marry Uberto so Vespone (the mute) pretend to marry Serpina, so Uberto ask Serpina to marry him not Vespone

    • @linominho6456
      @linominho6456 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ushgreta440 tysm po isa kang anghel nahulog sa sky🤞✨

  • @patcucciola
    @patcucciola  Před 11 lety

    Glad you enjoyed it! :-)

  • @krylle186
    @krylle186 Před 3 lety +1

    Who's is the composer of this opera buffa

  • @yenalbios2536
    @yenalbios2536 Před 3 lety

    What is the title of this no opera

  • @user-zi8hz8br9c
    @user-zi8hz8br9c Před 4 lety +1

    AMAZING!!!!!!

  • @pizzaconpina3479
    @pizzaconpina3479 Před 3 lety

    25:37

  • @Musevendyi
    @Musevendyi Před 11 lety +1

    What an utter delight! Many thanks.

  • @panhrgerardlempilainen4570

    Скажите а что за театр?

  • @libellula6396
    @libellula6396 Před 3 měsíci

    Chiama il baritono?
    Come si chiama

  • @marcosv.renaldini1195
    @marcosv.renaldini1195 Před 6 lety +1

    BR??

  • @aleshashiin1011
    @aleshashiin1011 Před 3 lety +11

    What is the title of the opera?
    Who is the composer?
    What is the style of the opera(opera seria/opera buffa)?why?
    What is the opera all about? (give a short storyline)

  • @greatmomentsofopera7170

    Beautifully sung and played. Appallingly directed. So little to do with the text

  • @user-fh6ub5pd3w
    @user-fh6ub5pd3w Před rokem

    Qual è l'intermezzo?

  • @sofisma3379
    @sofisma3379 Před 3 lety +1

    💖💖💖

  • @giuseppelogiurato5718
    @giuseppelogiurato5718 Před 8 lety

    I would like to know, what does the name of this intermezzo mean in English? (apologies for not knowing; my folks have been living in the USA for some time now... my Italian is shabby, but perhaps not completely lost?)... does it mean, "the servant girl is the boss"? (I could Google it, but I think it's more accurate and it's more fun to learn things from real people who really speak Italian.)

    • @tack534
      @tack534 Před 8 lety +1

      +Joseph LoGiurato "The Servant Turned Mistress"

  • @MrDavide914
    @MrDavide914 Před 4 lety +4

    What a loss that Pergolesi had to die at 26, he could have become another Mozart (actually predating the original...).

    • @gregking4142
      @gregking4142 Před 3 lety +1

      "Another Mozart" seems a bit of an exaggeration to me. By 26, Mozart was already composing things like Idomeneo and the "Gran Partita" serenade. There's no doubt that Pergolesi died too soon, though.