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Tommaso Traetta and the Fusion of Italian and French Opera in Parma

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In 1759, the court of the Italian Duchy of Parma adopted the inspiration of cultural creators who recommended a reform of Italian opera along French lines. These writers favored combining Italian-s...
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  • 06 October 2022
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In 1759, the court of the Italian Duchy of Parma adopted the inspiration of cultural creators who recommended a reform of Italian opera along French lines. These writers favored combining Italian-style music with the wider range of musical genres and scenic variety of French opera. As the music critic and commentator George W. Loomis shows in this groundbreaking volume, the young composer Tommaso Traetta was engaged to create new operas responding to these demands. As Loomis deftly demonstrates, Traetta’s operas were largely oriented toward the formal aria, a byproduct of making Italian music an essential component of this cross-cultural fusion. Nevertheless, they were strikingly innovative in their use of chorus, integrated dance, and accompanied recitative. Structurally, the operas reflect the French distinction between scenes of action and divertissements. After a brief flowering, the project was abandoned, primarily for lack of interest, but Traetta’s Parma operas deserve a previously unrecognized place in the history of Western music for their stimulation of opera seria in Italy and beyond. This included the works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, whose genre-defining Idomeneo (1781) proved a turning point in the development of opera.
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Price: $139.95
Pages: 416
Publisher: Academica Press
Imprint: Academica Press
Publication Date: 06 October 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781680532227
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Opera, PERFORMING ARTS / General, HISTORY / Europe / Italy
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This book by George Loomis, one of today’s finest music critics, is an important and essential contribution to our knowledge of a significant composer of the eighteenth-century Neapolitan School.  Tommaso Traetta was, together with other great musicians from the Puglia region (then part of the Kingdom of Naples), one of the dominant figures of the Neapolitan musical world.  With their operas these musicians influenced the theaters of all Europe, with a strong presence even in St. Petersburg.  Mozart declared to his father that one performance in Naples--the fundamental city for eighteenth-century music--was more important than two hundred performances in Germany.  Loomis sheds new and vivid light on this world, still largely unknown.  Thousands of manuscripts lie silent in the glorious library of the Naples Conservatory.  Their time will come!  But we are grateful today to the author of this book for his passion, knowledge and affection in deepening our appreciation of Tommaso Traetta, whose statue rises in front of the theater in his native city. 
--Riccardo Muti, internationally recognized conductor and music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, www.riccardomuti.com

George Loomis has written about music in the United States, Russia, and Europe for more than 30 years. His reviews and articles have appeared in many publications, including the Financial Timesthe International Herald Tribune, The New York Times, the New Criterion, Opera magazine and Musical America. A graduate of the University of Michigan School of Music and its Law School, he has a Ph.D. in music history from Yale. Since 2012 he has been co-New York correspondent for Opera. He is a regular member of the jury of the International Opera Awards and is co-chairman of the Music Critics Association of North America’s New Opera Award Committee. In 2018 he was honored by the Italian “Five Stars to Journalism Awards”