Research Catalog
Barcarola : il canto del gondoliere nella vita quotidiana e nell'immaginazione artistica
- Title
- Barcarola : il canto del gondoliere nella vita quotidiana e nell'immaginazione artistica / a cura di Sabine Meine ; con la collaborazione di Henrike Rost.
- Publication
- Roma : Viella, marzo 2015.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
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Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Performing Arts Research Collections to submit a request in person. | Text | Use in library | JMD 15-520 | Performing Arts Research Collections - Music |
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 184 pages : illustrations; 21 cm
- Summary
- "During the early decades of the nineteenth century, the barcarole - as sung by night on gondolas on the Grand Canal and performed with piano accompaniment in salons - became a veritable symbol of Venice. An important factor in the increasing production of barcaroles was tourism. The 1830s saw the opening of bathing facilities on the Venetian lagoon; these offered summer attractions alongside the winter theatrical season. The first printed book of Venetian Ballads - music and lyrics - was published in London between 1742 and 1748: production further intensified during the first half of the nineteenth century, when music publishing flourished in Italy and in Europe at large. The repertoire is most frequently denoted by terms such as barcarola, canzonetta and arietta (sometimes accompanied by the subtitle romanza); in Venice, songs were popularly called canzonette. Whereas, in the early eighteenth century, composers of canzoni da battello ("boat songs") were usually anonymous (and, presumably, poorly-educated), by the end of the century the authors were men of letters and professional composers. Barcaroles were composed by Venetian poets and musicians; the genre, however, was also practised by famous European composers such as Beethoven, Mayr, Rossini, and Liszt. At the beginning of the nineteenth century the barcarole was widely known in all social environments. By the early 1850s, however, the eighteenth-century literary style peculiar to the genre had begun to lose favour among the higher classes; the indecency of subjects and the fickleness of the women as depicted in barcaroles were incompatible with the romantic ideals portrayed, in particular, in contemporary opera. Higher classes tend to draw boundaries between themselves and the lower classes when they perceive a threat to their social status: in this case, was the fear of social turmoil in the wake of the 1848 rebellion a factor? Ambivalence, however, continued in the relationship between the higher and the lower classes. In Verdi's Ballo in maschera (1859), count Riccardo, disguised as a fisherman, enters the cave of the sorceress Ulrica and sings a barcarole. Nineteenth-century Venetian historiographers argued - in opposition to Daru - that the stability of the Serenissima was based on the idea of unity and concord between different social levels, in particular the patriciate and the lower classes: in a city where Venetian dialect (the language of the barcaroles) was spoken in all social environments, such assertions represented not only an historical judgement but also a political project."--Publisher's web site.
- Series Statement
- Venetiana / Centro Tedesco di Studi Veneziani ; 16
- Uniform Title
- Venetiana ; 16.
- Subjects
- Music > Europe > 18th century > History and criticism > Congresses
- Venice (Italy) > Foreign public opinion, European > Congresses
- Music > Europe > 19th century > History and criticism > Congresses
- Venice (Italy) > Intellectual life > Congresses
- Barcaroles > History and criticism > Congresses
- Music > Italy > Venice > History and criticism > Congresses
- Civilization, Modern > Italian influences > Congresses
- Note
- Proceedings of a workshop held conjunction with a concert in Venice, Italy, June 13, 2013.
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references.
- Language (note)
- Papers in Italian and summaries in English.
- Call Number
- JMD 15-520
- ISBN
- 9788867283293
- 8867283294
- OCLC
- 907639070
- Title
- Barcarola : il canto del gondoliere nella vita quotidiana e nell'immaginazione artistica / a cura di Sabine Meine ; con la collaborazione di Henrike Rost.
- Publisher
- Roma : Viella, marzo 2015.
- Edition
- Prima edizione.
- Type of Content
- text
- Type of Medium
- unmediated
- Type of Carrier
- volume
- Series
- Venetiana / Centro Tedesco di Studi Veneziani ; 16Venetiana ; 16.
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references.
- Language
- Papers in Italian and summaries in English.
- Added Author
- Meine, Sabine, editor, writer of introduction.Rost, Henrike, editor.Deutsches Studienzentrum in Venedig, issuing body.
- Research Call Number
- JMD 15-520