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The Standard Oratorios: Their Stories, Their Music, And Their Composers
by George P. (George Putnam) Upton
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 300 KB
Description
This work is a scholarly reference in the form of a comprehensive handbook that discusses the history, development, and key figures of the oratorio genre. It examines prominent oratorios, their musical structure, and the biographies of notable composers from the late 19th century. The author, George P. Upton, contextualises the genre within its religious and cultural origins, explaining how the oratorio evolved from medieval religious plays and sermons into a distinct musical form. The book covers the narrative aspects of oratorios, their musical characteristics, and their significance in the history of sacred music, providing a detailed survey of the genre's evolution and its place within art history.
Upton's work serves as a companion to his earlier publication on operas and aims to inform readers about the development of the oratorio through historical periods. It offers a factual account of the genre's defining features, its representative works, and the contributions of individual composers, emphasizing its importance within the broader context of sacred and dramatic music in the Western tradition.
Upton's work serves as a companion to his earlier publication on operas and aims to inform readers about the development of the oratorio through historical periods. It offers a factual account of the genre's defining features, its representative works, and the contributions of individual composers, emphasizing its importance within the broader context of sacred and dramatic music in the Western tradition.
From the opening pages
musical writers, says: "The oratorio had its origin from San Filippo Neri, [1] who, in his chapel, after sermons and other devotions, in order to allure young people to pious offices, and to detain [10] them from earthly pleasures, had hymns, psalms, and such like prayers sung by one or more voices." In tracing its evolutionary stages, its root will be found in the moralities, mysteries, and miracle-plays of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, which were instituted for the purpose of impressing Biblical events in symbolical form upon the early converts to the Christian Church. These representations were entirely dramatic in character, and their subjects, though always sacred, were often grotesquely treated, and sometimes verged on buffoonery. Among the actors, God, Christ, Satan, Mary, and the angels nearly always appeared; later, the various virtues and vices were personified. The representations were usually given in the streets or in fields, and sometimes on the water. The highest dignitaries of the Church did not disdain to act in these plays, nor did their promoters hesitate at times to reduce the exhibition to the level of a Punch-and-Judy show by the introduction of puppets cleverly manipulated. The earliest of these miracle-plays in England were performed by the various London Companies. The Tanners, for instance, produced the Fall of Lucifer. The Drapers played the Creation, in which Adam and Eve appeared in their original costume,--apparently without giving offence. The Water-Drawers naturally chose the Deluge. In the scene describing the embarkation of Noah's family, the patriarch has a great deal of trouble with his wife, who is determined not to go aboard. She declares that if her [11] worldly friends are left behind, she will stay and drown with them, and he can "Rowe forth away when thou liste, And get thee another wif." Noah expostulates with her in vain, grows furiously indignant, and bids her "Come in, wif, in twenty devill ways, Or alles stand thee without." Her friends the gossips entreat her to remain with them, and have a carousal over a "pottel full of malmsey;" but at last Shem makes a virtue of necessity and forces her into the ark, as the following "In faith, moder, in ye shall, Whither you will or noughte." NOE. "Well me wif into this boate." [ She gives him a box on the ear. ] "Haue you that for thee note." NOE. "A le Mary this…
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