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Olimpie

Olimpie (also spelled Olympie) is an opera in three acts by Gaspare Spontini. The French libretto, by Armand-Michel Dieulafoy and Charles Brifaut, is based on the play of the same name [fr] by Voltaire (1761). Olimpie was first performed on 22 December 1819 by the Paris Opéra at the Salle Montansier. When sung in Italian or German, it is usually given the title Olimpia.

Olimpie
Opera by Gaspare Spontini
The composer
Librettist
LanguageFrench
Based onOlimpie by Voltaire
Premiere
22 December 1819 (1819-12-22)

Background edit

The story takes place in the aftermath of the death of Alexander the Great, who left a vast empire, stretching from Macedonia through Persia to the Indian Ocean. His surviving generals fought for control of the empire and divided it up. Two of the historical characters in Voltaire's play and Spontini's opera, Cassander and Antigonus, were among the rivals competing for parts of the empire. Antigonus was one of Alexander's generals, while Cassander was the son of another of Alexander's generals, Antipater. Alexander's widow, Statira was supposedly killed by Alexander's first wife Roxana shortly after his death, but in Voltaire's play and Spontini's opera, she survives incognito, as a priestess of Diana in Ephesus. The title character Olimpie, daughter of Statira and Alexander, is likely entirely fictional.

It wasn't long after the death of Alexander that people began to glorify and mythologize his life. By the 3rd century it was believed by many that he was a mortal who had been selected by the gods to perform his heroic deeds. Although it is now thought that Alexander died from a fever, for many centuries it was believed he was murdered. The 'Alexander Romance', which first appeared at that time, obscured the true explanation of his death: "the speaking trees of the Amazons were said to have told him of his early death during his last battle. Alexander would die after drinking a poisonous mixture served to him by his valet Iolus upon his return."[1] It is not surprising, that Voltaire and Spontini's librettists Dieulafoy and Brifaut also assume that Alexander was murdered. Cassander's father Antipater was often designated as the leader of a poisoning plot, and Cassander himself was well known for his hostility to the memory of Alexander.

The work and its performance history edit

 
Autograph ms of the first page of the overture
 
Sketch by Ignazio Degotti [fr] of the décor for act 1 of the 1819 production

Spontini began composing Olimpie in 1815. It was his third major, 3-act work for the Paris Opera. In it, he "combined the psychologically exact character-drawing of La vestale [of 1807] with the massive choral style of his Fernand Cortez [of 1809] and wrote a work stripped of spectacular effects. In its grandiose conception, it appears the musical equivalent of neoclassical architecture."[2] The Parisian premiere received mixed reviews, and Spontini withdrew it after the seventh performance (on 12 January 1820[3]), so he could revise the finale with a happy rather than tragic ending.[2]

The first revised version was given in German as Olimpia in Berlin, where it was conducted by Spontini, who had been invited there by Frederick William III to become the Prussian General Musikdirector.[4] E. T. A. Hoffmann provided the German translation of the libretto. This version was first staged on 14 May 1821 at the Königliches Opernhaus,[5] where it was a success.[2] After 78 performances in Berlin,[6] it was given productions in Dresden (12 November 1825, with additions by Carl Maria von Weber),[7] Kassel, Cologne,[8] and Darmstadt (26 December 1858).[7]

Olimpie calls for huge orchestral forces (including the first use of the ophicleide).[9] The finale of the Berlin version included spectacular effects, in which Cassandre rode in on a live elephant.[10][11] Thus, like La vestale and Fernand Cortez, the work prefigures later French Grand Opera.

Spontini revised the opera a second time, retaining the happy ending for its revival by the Opéra at the Salle Le Peletier on 27 February 1826.[12] Adolphe Nourrit replaced his father Louis in the role of Cassandre,[13] and an aria composed by Weber was also included.[14] Even in its fully revised form, the opera failed to hold the stage. Audiences found its libretto too old-fashioned, and it could not compete with the operas of Rossini.[2]

The opera was given in Italian in concert form in Rome on 12 December 1885[7] and revived more recently in Florence in 1930, at La Scala in Milan in 1966 (for which a sound recording is available), and at the Perugia Festival in 1979.[8]

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role[13] Voice type Premiere cast, 22 December 1819
Conductor: Rodolphe Kreutzer[15]
Second revised version,[16]
27 February 1826[12]
Conductor: Henri Valentino[17]
Olimpie, daughter of Alexander the Great and Statira soprano Augustine Albert Laure Cinti-Damoreau
Statira, widow of Alexander soprano Caroline Branchu Caroline Branchu
Cassandre, son of Antipater, King of Macedon tenor Louis Nourrit Adolphe Nourrit
Antigone, king of a part of Asia bass Henri-Étienne Dérivis Henri-Étienne Dérivis
L'Hiérofante, high priest, who presides over the celebration of the Great Mysteries bass Louis-Bartholomé-Pascal Bonel[18] Louis-Bartholomé-Pascal Bonel
Arbate, Cassandre's officer tenor
(no role)
Hyacinthe Trévaux[19]
Hermas, Antigone's officer bass Charles-Louis Pouilley[20] Charles-Louis Pouilley
Chorus: Priests, vice ministers, initiates, sorcerers, priestesses, royal officers, soldiers, people, Bacchantes, Amazons, navigators

Synopsis edit

 
Scale model of the Temple of Diana at Ephesus
Place: Ephesus
Time: 308 BC, 15 years after the death of Alexander the Great[1]

Act 1 edit

The square in front of the Temple of Diana

Antigone, King of a part of Asia, and Cassandre, King of Macedon, have been implicated in Alexander's murder. They have also been at war with one another but are now ready to be reconciled. Nevertheless, a new obstacle to peace arises in the form of the slave girl Aménais, with whom both the kings are in love. In reality, Aménais is Alexander the Great's daughter, Olimpie, in disguise. Statira, Alexander's widow and Olimpie's mother, has also assumed the guise of the priestess Arzane. She denounces the proposed marriage between "Aménais" and Cassandre, accusing the latter of Alexander's murder.

Act 2 edit

Statira and Olimpie reveal their true identities to one another and to Cassandre. Olimpie defends Cassandre against Statira's accusations, claiming that he once saved her life. Statira is unconvinced and is still intent on revenge with the help of Antigone and his army.

Act 3 edit

 
A young Éphésienne scattering flowers in act 3, lithograph by Godefroy Engelmann

Olimpie is divided between her love for Cassandre and her duty to her mother. The troops of Cassandre and Antigone clash and Antigone is mortally wounded. Before dying he confesses he was responsible for the death of Alexander, not Cassandre. Cassandre and Olimpie are now free to marry.

[In the original 1819 Paris version, Cassander is the murderer of Alexander and after his victory, "Statira stabs herself on stage and, together with Olympia, she is called to the Lord by the spirit of Alexander, who emerges from his grave (in Voltaire's drama, Olympia is married to Antigonus and throws herself into the blazing pyre in a confession of her love for Cassander)."[1][21]

Recordings edit

Year Cast
(Olimpie, Statira, Cassandre, Antigone, Hermas, Hiérofante)
Conductor
Orchestra, Chorus
Label[22]
Catalogue number
1966 Pilar Lorengar, Fiorenza Cossotto, Franco Tagliavini, Giangiacomo Guelfi, Silvio Maionica, Nicola Zaccaria Francesco Molinari-Pradelli
La Scala Orchestra and Chorus
(Recorded live on 6 June 1966, sung in Italian)
CD: Opera d'Oro
Cat: OPD 1395[23]
1984 Júlia Várady, Stefania Toczyska, Franco Tagliavini, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Josef Becker, George Fortune Gerd Albrecht
Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, RIAS Kammerchor
CD: ORFEO
Cat: C 137 862 H[24]
2016 Karina Gauvin, Kate Aldrich, Mathias Vidal, Josef Wagner, Philippe Souvage, Patrick Bolleire Jérémie Rhorer CD: Bru Zane
Cat: BZ1035[25]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Müller 1984, p. 11 (unnumbered)
  2. ^ a b c d Gerhard 1992
  3. ^ Pitou 1990, p. 967. Pitou reports that the premiere performance earned 7,836 francs, 40 centimes, but receipts dropped steadily for each of the subsequent performances. At the seventh performance, only 2,135 francs, 90 centimes, were collected at the box office.
  4. ^ Müller 1984, p. 7 (in German), 10–11 (in English)
  5. ^ Casaglia 2005b.
  6. ^ Parker 2003.
  7. ^ a b c Loewenberg 1978, column 666
  8. ^ a b Müller 1984, p. 12 (unnumbered)
  9. ^ Ralph Thomas Dudgeon, The Keyed Bugle (second edition), Lanham, Maryland, Scarecrow Press, 2004, page (not numbered): "Keyed Brass Chronology"; Adam Carse, The History of Orchestration, New York, Dover, 1964, p. 239.
  10. ^ Sonneck 1922, p. 142.
  11. ^ Macdonald 2001, p. 871.
  12. ^ a b Everett 2013 gives the date of the premiere as 27 February, which is also the date printed on the 1826 libretto. The review in the Journal des débats "Académie Royale de Musique", 3 March 1826, Vendredi)" states the performance took place on "Monday evening" [i.e., 27 February 1826]. The Tuesday date, 28 February 1826, given by Gerhard 1992 and Casaglia 2005c, may be incorrect.
  13. ^ a b 1826 libretto.
  14. ^ Casaglia 2005c.
  15. ^ Casaglia 2005a and Everett 2013, p. 138 ("the resident conductor of the Opéra)." Everett gives the date of the premier as 20 December 1819, but Lajarte 1878, p. 94, states that, although 20 December appears on the printed libretto, it is erroneous, and the premier actually took place on 22 December.
  16. ^ The cast list is from the 1826 libretto and Casaglia 2005c. Everett 2013, p. 183, says that the role of Statira was sung by "Mme Quiney (soprano)" and that of Olimpie by "Caroline Branchu (soprano)", however, the review of the performance in the Journal des débats (3 March 1826, p. 4), reports: "Mlle Cinti a chanté avec plus de goût que d'expressiou [sic] le rôle d'Olympie."
  17. ^ Autograph letter from Spontini to Valentino (Paris, 1 March 1826), thanking Valentino for conducting the orchestra (BnF catalogue général – Notice bibliographique). Tamvaco 2000, p. 619 states that Valentino conducted the premiere of the original version, possibly an error. Pougin 1880 does not specify whether Valentino conducted the 1819 premiere or the 1826 revision. Everett 2013, p. 183, gives François Habeneck as the conductor.
  18. ^ Tamvaco 2000, p. 1233: (full name)
  19. ^ Tamvaco 2000, p. 1303: (full name)
  20. ^ Tamvaco 2000, p. 1286: (full name)
  21. ^ 1819 libretto, p. 56.
  22. ^ "Olimpie (Olimpia) discography". www.operadis-opera-discography.org.uk. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  23. ^ "On-line catalogue entry Opera d'Oro". Allegro Music / Opera d'Oro. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  24. ^ Revised version of 1826, in French (OCLC 856341732). "On-line catalogue entry ORFEO". ORFEO. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  25. ^ According to the CD booklet, the performance was recorded on 31 May and 2 June 2016 and used the 1826 revised version of the score in French. "Presto Classical". Bru Zane. Retrieved 3 March 2019.

Sources

  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Olympie, 22 December 1819". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Olympia, 14 May 1821". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Olimpie, 28 February 1826". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Everett, Andrew (2013). Josephine's Composer: The Life Times and Works of Gaspare Pacifico Luigi Spontini (1774-1851). Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse. ISBN 9781477234143.
  • Gerhard, Anselm (1992). "Olimpie". In Stanley Sadie (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Vol. 3. London. pp. 664–665. ISBN 0333734327.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link). Also Oxford Music Online (subscription required).
  • Lajarte, Théodore (1878). Bibliothèque musicale du Théâtre de l'Opéra. Vol. 2 [1793–1876]. Paris: Librairie des Bibliophiles.
  • Loewenberg, Alfred (1978). Annals of Opera 1597–1940 (third, revised ed.). Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 9780874718515.
  • Macdonald, Hugh (2001). "Gaspare Spontini". In Amanda Holden (ed.). The New Penguin Opera Guide. New York: Penguin Putnam. pp. 869–871. ISBN 0-140-29312-4.
  • Müller, Christa (1984). "Spontini and his Olympie", translated by Roger Clément. Booklet included with the Orfeo recording conducted by Gerd Albrecht. OCLC 18396752
  • Parker, Bill (2003). "Olimpia". Booklet included with the Allegro CD of the 1966 La Scala performance conducted by Molinari-Pradelli. Portland, Oregon: Allegro. OCLC 315554990
  • Pitou, Spire (1990). "Olympie". The Paris Opéra: An Encyclopedia of Operas, Ballets, Composers, and Performers. Growth and Grandeur, 1815–1914. New York: Greenwood Press. pp. 963–967. ISBN 9780313262180.
  • Pougin, Arthur (1880). "Valentino (Henri-Justin-Joseph". Biographie universelle des musiciens et Bibliographie générale de la musique par F.-J. Fétis. Supplément et complément. Vol. 2. Paris: Firmin-Didot. pp. 597–598.
  • Sonneck, O. G. (1922). "Heinrich Heine's Musical Feuilletons". The Musical Quarterly. 8. New York: G. Schirmer: [https://books.google.com/books?id=alk5AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA119 119–159.
  • Tamvaco, Jean-Louis (2000). Les Cancans de l'Opéra. Chroniques de l'Académie Royale de Musique et du théâtre, à Paris sous les deux restorations (2 volumes) (in French). Paris: CNRS Editions. ISBN 9782271056856.

External links edit

  • Spontini's Olimpie, French piano-vocal score (Paris, Erard, c. 1826) at Harvard University Library
  • Spontini's Olympie, French piano-vocal score (Paris, Brandus & Dufour, c. 1861) at Internet Archive
  • Spontini's Olimpie, 1825 instrumental parts (some missing) from the Opera Archive of Dresden at RISM (Répertoire International des Sources Musicales)
  • Spontini's Olimpie, 1819 French libretto at Google Books
  • Spontini's Olimpia, 1821 German libretto (Berlin) at the Bavarian State Library
  • Spontini's Olimpie, 1826 French libretto at Gallica
  • Spontini's Olimpia, 1885 Italian libretto (Rome) at Internet Archive
  • Voltaire's play, published in French in 1763 as Olimpie at Google Books
  • Voltaire's play, published in French in 1763 as Olympie at Internet Archive
  • Olimpie: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project

olimpie, also, spelled, olympie, opera, three, acts, gaspare, spontini, french, libretto, armand, michel, dieulafoy, charles, brifaut, based, play, same, name, voltaire, 1761, first, performed, december, 1819, paris, opéra, salle, montansier, when, sung, itali. Olimpie also spelled Olympie is an opera in three acts by Gaspare Spontini The French libretto by Armand Michel Dieulafoy and Charles Brifaut is based on the play of the same name fr by Voltaire 1761 Olimpie was first performed on 22 December 1819 by the Paris Opera at the Salle Montansier When sung in Italian or German it is usually given the title Olimpia OlimpieOpera by Gaspare SpontiniThe composerLibrettistArmand Michel Dieulafoy Charles BrifautLanguageFrenchBased onOlimpie by VoltairePremiere22 December 1819 1819 12 22 Salle Montansier Paris Contents 1 Background 2 The work and its performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 5 Recordings 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThe story takes place in the aftermath of the death of Alexander the Great who left a vast empire stretching from Macedonia through Persia to the Indian Ocean His surviving generals fought for control of the empire and divided it up Two of the historical characters in Voltaire s play and Spontini s opera Cassander and Antigonus were among the rivals competing for parts of the empire Antigonus was one of Alexander s generals while Cassander was the son of another of Alexander s generals Antipater Alexander s widow Statira was supposedly killed by Alexander s first wife Roxana shortly after his death but in Voltaire s play and Spontini s opera she survives incognito as a priestess of Diana in Ephesus The title character Olimpie daughter of Statira and Alexander is likely entirely fictional It wasn t long after the death of Alexander that people began to glorify and mythologize his life By the 3rd century it was believed by many that he was a mortal who had been selected by the gods to perform his heroic deeds Although it is now thought that Alexander died from a fever for many centuries it was believed he was murdered The Alexander Romance which first appeared at that time obscured the true explanation of his death the speaking trees of the Amazons were said to have told him of his early death during his last battle Alexander would die after drinking a poisonous mixture served to him by his valet Iolus upon his return 1 It is not surprising that Voltaire and Spontini s librettists Dieulafoy and Brifaut also assume that Alexander was murdered Cassander s father Antipater was often designated as the leader of a poisoning plot and Cassander himself was well known for his hostility to the memory of Alexander The work and its performance history edit nbsp Autograph ms of the first page of the overture nbsp Sketch by Ignazio Degotti fr of the decor for act 1 of the 1819 productionSpontini began composing Olimpie in 1815 It was his third major 3 act work for the Paris Opera In it he combined the psychologically exact character drawing of La vestale of 1807 with the massive choral style of his Fernand Cortez of 1809 and wrote a work stripped of spectacular effects In its grandiose conception it appears the musical equivalent of neoclassical architecture 2 The Parisian premiere received mixed reviews and Spontini withdrew it after the seventh performance on 12 January 1820 3 so he could revise the finale with a happy rather than tragic ending 2 The first revised version was given in German as Olimpia in Berlin where it was conducted by Spontini who had been invited there by Frederick William III to become the Prussian General Musikdirector 4 E T A Hoffmann provided the German translation of the libretto This version was first staged on 14 May 1821 at the Konigliches Opernhaus 5 where it was a success 2 After 78 performances in Berlin 6 it was given productions in Dresden 12 November 1825 with additions by Carl Maria von Weber 7 Kassel Cologne 8 and Darmstadt 26 December 1858 7 Olimpie calls for huge orchestral forces including the first use of the ophicleide 9 The finale of the Berlin version included spectacular effects in which Cassandre rode in on a live elephant 10 11 Thus like La vestale and Fernand Cortez the work prefigures later French Grand Opera Spontini revised the opera a second time retaining the happy ending for its revival by the Opera at the Salle Le Peletier on 27 February 1826 12 Adolphe Nourrit replaced his father Louis in the role of Cassandre 13 and an aria composed by Weber was also included 14 Even in its fully revised form the opera failed to hold the stage Audiences found its libretto too old fashioned and it could not compete with the operas of Rossini 2 The opera was given in Italian in concert form in Rome on 12 December 1885 7 and revived more recently in Florence in 1930 at La Scala in Milan in 1966 for which a sound recording is available and at the Perugia Festival in 1979 8 Roles editRoles voice types premiere cast Role 13 Voice type Premiere cast 22 December 1819Conductor Rodolphe Kreutzer 15 Second revised version 16 27 February 1826 12 Conductor Henri Valentino 17 Olimpie daughter of Alexander the Great and Statira soprano Augustine Albert Laure Cinti DamoreauStatira widow of Alexander soprano Caroline Branchu Caroline BranchuCassandre son of Antipater King of Macedon tenor Louis Nourrit Adolphe NourritAntigone king of a part of Asia bass Henri Etienne Derivis Henri Etienne DerivisL Hierofante high priest who presides over the celebration of the Great Mysteries bass Louis Bartholome Pascal Bonel 18 Louis Bartholome Pascal BonelArbate Cassandre s officer tenor no role Hyacinthe Trevaux 19 Hermas Antigone s officer bass Charles Louis Pouilley 20 Charles Louis PouilleyChorus Priests vice ministers initiates sorcerers priestesses royal officers soldiers people Bacchantes Amazons navigatorsSynopsis edit nbsp Scale model of the Temple of Diana at EphesusPlace Ephesus Time 308 BC 15 years after the death of Alexander the Great 1 Act 1 edit The square in front of the Temple of DianaAntigone King of a part of Asia and Cassandre King of Macedon have been implicated in Alexander s murder They have also been at war with one another but are now ready to be reconciled Nevertheless a new obstacle to peace arises in the form of the slave girl Amenais with whom both the kings are in love In reality Amenais is Alexander the Great s daughter Olimpie in disguise Statira Alexander s widow and Olimpie s mother has also assumed the guise of the priestess Arzane She denounces the proposed marriage between Amenais and Cassandre accusing the latter of Alexander s murder Act 2 edit Statira and Olimpie reveal their true identities to one another and to Cassandre Olimpie defends Cassandre against Statira s accusations claiming that he once saved her life Statira is unconvinced and is still intent on revenge with the help of Antigone and his army Act 3 edit nbsp A young Ephesienne scattering flowers in act 3 lithograph by Godefroy EngelmannOlimpie is divided between her love for Cassandre and her duty to her mother The troops of Cassandre and Antigone clash and Antigone is mortally wounded Before dying he confesses he was responsible for the death of Alexander not Cassandre Cassandre and Olimpie are now free to marry In the original 1819 Paris version Cassander is the murderer of Alexander and after his victory Statira stabs herself on stage and together with Olympia she is called to the Lord by the spirit of Alexander who emerges from his grave in Voltaire s drama Olympia is married to Antigonus and throws herself into the blazing pyre in a confession of her love for Cassander 1 21 Recordings editYear Cast Olimpie Statira Cassandre Antigone Hermas Hierofante ConductorOrchestra Chorus Label 22 Catalogue number1966 Pilar Lorengar Fiorenza Cossotto Franco Tagliavini Giangiacomo Guelfi Silvio Maionica Nicola Zaccaria Francesco Molinari PradelliLa Scala Orchestra and Chorus Recorded live on 6 June 1966 sung in Italian CD Opera d OroCat OPD 1395 23 1984 Julia Varady Stefania Toczyska Franco Tagliavini Dietrich Fischer Dieskau Josef Becker George Fortune Gerd AlbrechtBerlin Radio Symphony Orchestra RIAS Kammerchor CD ORFEOCat C 137 862 H 24 2016 Karina Gauvin Kate Aldrich Mathias Vidal Josef Wagner Philippe Souvage Patrick Bolleire Jeremie Rhorer CD Bru ZaneCat BZ1035 25 References editNotes a b c Muller 1984 p 11 unnumbered a b c d Gerhard 1992 Pitou 1990 p 967 Pitou reports that the premiere performance earned 7 836 francs 40 centimes but receipts dropped steadily for each of the subsequent performances At the seventh performance only 2 135 francs 90 centimes were collected at the box office Muller 1984 p 7 in German 10 11 in English Casaglia 2005b Parker 2003 a b c Loewenberg 1978 column 666 a b Muller 1984 p 12 unnumbered Ralph Thomas Dudgeon The Keyed Bugle second edition Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press 2004 page not numbered Keyed Brass Chronology Adam Carse The History of Orchestration New York Dover 1964 p 239 Sonneck 1922 p 142 Macdonald 2001 p 871 a b Everett 2013 gives the date of the premiere as 27 February which is also the date printed on the 1826 libretto The review in the Journal des debats Academie Royale de Musique 3 March 1826 Vendredi states the performance took place on Monday evening i e 27 February 1826 The Tuesday date 28 February 1826 given by Gerhard 1992 and Casaglia 2005c may be incorrect a b 1826 libretto Casaglia 2005c Casaglia 2005a and Everett 2013 p 138 the resident conductor of the Opera Everett gives the date of the premier as 20 December 1819 but Lajarte 1878 p 94 states that although 20 December appears on the printed libretto it is erroneous and the premier actually took place on 22 December The cast list is from the 1826 libretto and Casaglia 2005c Everett 2013 p 183 says that the role of Statira was sung by Mme Quiney soprano and that of Olimpie by Caroline Branchu soprano however the review of the performance in the Journal des debats 3 March 1826 p 4 reports Mlle Cinti a chante avec plus de gout que d expressiou sic le role d Olympie Autograph letter from Spontini to Valentino Paris 1 March 1826 thanking Valentino for conducting the orchestra BnF catalogue general Notice bibliographique Tamvaco 2000 p 619 states that Valentino conducted the premiere of the original version possibly an error Pougin 1880 does not specify whether Valentino conducted the 1819 premiere or the 1826 revision Everett 2013 p 183 gives Francois Habeneck as the conductor Tamvaco 2000 p 1233 full name Tamvaco 2000 p 1303 full name Tamvaco 2000 p 1286 full name 1819 libretto p 56 Olimpie Olimpia discography www operadis opera discography org uk Retrieved 2 October 2010 On line catalogue entry Opera d Oro Allegro Music Opera d Oro Retrieved 2 October 2010 Revised version of 1826 in French OCLC 856341732 On line catalogue entry ORFEO ORFEO Retrieved 2 October 2010 According to the CD booklet the performance was recorded on 31 May and 2 June 2016 and used the 1826 revised version of the score in French Presto Classical Bru Zane Retrieved 3 March 2019 Sources Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Olympie 22 December 1819 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Olympia 14 May 1821 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Olimpie 28 February 1826 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Everett Andrew 2013 Josephine s Composer The Life Times and Works of Gaspare Pacifico Luigi Spontini 1774 1851 Bloomington Indiana AuthorHouse ISBN 9781477234143 Gerhard Anselm 1992 Olimpie In Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol 3 London pp 664 665 ISBN 0333734327 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Also Oxford Music Online subscription required Lajarte Theodore 1878 Bibliotheque musicale du Theatre de l Opera Vol 2 1793 1876 Paris Librairie des Bibliophiles Loewenberg Alfred 1978 Annals of Opera 1597 1940 third revised ed Totowa New Jersey Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 9780874718515 Macdonald Hugh 2001 Gaspare Spontini In Amanda Holden ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam pp 869 871 ISBN 0 140 29312 4 Muller Christa 1984 Spontini and his Olympie translated by Roger Clement Booklet included with the Orfeo recording conducted by Gerd Albrecht OCLC 18396752 Parker Bill 2003 Olimpia Booklet included with the Allegro CD of the 1966 La Scala performance conducted by Molinari Pradelli Portland Oregon Allegro OCLC 315554990 Pitou Spire 1990 Olympie The Paris Opera An Encyclopedia of Operas Ballets Composers and Performers Growth and Grandeur 1815 1914 New York Greenwood Press pp 963 967 ISBN 9780313262180 Pougin Arthur 1880 Valentino Henri Justin Joseph Biographie universelle des musiciens et Bibliographie generale de la musique par F J Fetis Supplement et complement Vol 2 Paris Firmin Didot pp 597 598 Sonneck O G 1922 Heinrich Heine s Musical Feuilletons The Musical Quarterly 8 New York G Schirmer https books google com books id alk5AAAAIAAJ amp pg PA119 119 159 Tamvaco Jean Louis 2000 Les Cancans de l Opera Chroniques de l Academie Royale de Musique et du theatre a Paris sous les deux restorations 2 volumes in French Paris CNRS Editions ISBN 9782271056856 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olimpie Spontini s Olimpie French piano vocal score Paris Erard c 1826 at Harvard University Library Spontini s Olympie French piano vocal score Paris Brandus amp Dufour c 1861 at Internet Archive Spontini s Olimpie 1825 instrumental parts some missing from the Opera Archive of Dresden at RISM Repertoire International des Sources Musicales Spontini s Olimpie 1819 French libretto at Google Books Spontini s Olimpia 1821 German libretto Berlin at the Bavarian State Library Spontini s Olimpie 1826 French libretto at Gallica Spontini s Olimpia 1885 Italian libretto Rome at Internet Archive Voltaire s play published in French in 1763 as Olimpie at Google Books Voltaire s play published in French in 1763 as Olympie at Internet Archive Olimpie Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olimpie amp oldid 1180353077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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