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Mozart's Così fan tutte
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A groundbreaking new approach proposes answers to many of the opera's unresolved questions.WINNER of the Mozart Society of America 'Marjorie Weston Emerson Award' for 2008 This study proposes a hy...
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18 September 2008

A groundbreaking new approach proposes answers to many of the opera's unresolved questions.
WINNER of the Mozart Society of America 'Marjorie Weston Emerson Award' for 2008 This study proposes a hypothesis to account for some of the opera's long-standing 'problems'. It suggests that Mozart considered the idea that thepairings in Act II should not be crossed: that each of the two disguised officers should seek to seduce his own woman. Although this alternative plot structure was rejected, signs of it may remain in the final score, in the uneasy co-existence of dramatic duplicity and musical sincerity, and in the ending, in which the easy restitution of the original couples seems not to take account of the new passions that have been aroused. Evidence that several of the singers were re-cast is also presented.
In addition to these radically new ideas about the conceptual genesis of Così, the book also provides a full account of the work's compositional history, based on early Viennese and Bohemian copies. Four different versions are identified, including a significant revision in which Mozart removed the Act II finale canon. The composer's probable involvement in the 1791 Prague production is also discussed.
IAN WOODFIELD is Professor of Historical Musicology, School of Music and Sonic Arts, Queen's University Belfast.
WINNER of the Mozart Society of America 'Marjorie Weston Emerson Award' for 2008 This study proposes a hypothesis to account for some of the opera's long-standing 'problems'. It suggests that Mozart considered the idea that thepairings in Act II should not be crossed: that each of the two disguised officers should seek to seduce his own woman. Although this alternative plot structure was rejected, signs of it may remain in the final score, in the uneasy co-existence of dramatic duplicity and musical sincerity, and in the ending, in which the easy restitution of the original couples seems not to take account of the new passions that have been aroused. Evidence that several of the singers were re-cast is also presented.
In addition to these radically new ideas about the conceptual genesis of Così, the book also provides a full account of the work's compositional history, based on early Viennese and Bohemian copies. Four different versions are identified, including a significant revision in which Mozart removed the Act II finale canon. The composer's probable involvement in the 1791 Prague production is also discussed.
IAN WOODFIELD is Professor of Historical Musicology, School of Music and Sonic Arts, Queen's University Belfast.
Price: $130.00
Pages: 264
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Boydell Press
Publication Date:
18 September 2008
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781843834069
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
MUSIC / History & Criticism, History of music, MUSIC / Individual Composer & Musician, Music reviews and criticism
Elegant and stimulating. Woodfield has done something entirely new. He has written a book about one of the most fascinating and enigmatic of Mozart's operas, based on an exhaustive and scrupulous study of the autograph score and the manuscript copies in which it circulated during the first two decades after its premiere. [The book is an] exceptionally rich and adventurous exploration of Mozart's compositional process.
Introduction
The Autograph
Singers and their Arias
Refining the Musical Text
Casting the Roles
Lovers Crossed or Uncrossed
The Vienna Court Theatre Score
Early Manuscript Scores and Parts
Mozart's Revised Vienna Version
Early Italian Language Performances
Conclusion
Appendices
Bibliography
Index
The Autograph
Singers and their Arias
Refining the Musical Text
Casting the Roles
Lovers Crossed or Uncrossed
The Vienna Court Theatre Score
Early Manuscript Scores and Parts
Mozart's Revised Vienna Version
Early Italian Language Performances
Conclusion
Appendices
Bibliography
Index