Description

Book Synopsis
La musica napoletana conosce uno straordinario successo europeo fin dai primi decenni del Settecento. I contributi raccolti in questo volume presentano le fonti e la fortuna dei Napoletani, e di Pergolesi in particolare, a Dresda, in Boemia e in Slesia. Le fonti pergolesiane vengono esaminate fin nei dettagli di scrittura, tanto in vista della nuova edizione critica quanto nella prospettiva della prassi esecutiva storicamente informata. La corrispondenza diplomatica tra Dresda e Napoli si rivela un canale ricchissimo di scambi di informazioni e di partiture. Lontano dalla corte sassone, per la diffusione della musica napoletana giocano un ruolo essenziale alcune famiglie nobiliari boeme. Le case di ordini religiosi (cistercensi, gesuiti) si scambiano tra Boemia e Slesia moltissime composizioni sacre, variamente adattate secondo i bisogni locali. Le opere napoletane sono popolarizzate dalle compagnie girovaghe di cantanti, che solitamente provengono dall’Italia settentrionale. Nuovi elementi biografici e analisi di opere arricchiscono la nostra conoscenza di conterranei o contemporanei di Pergolesi come Giovanni Alberto Ristori, Nicola Porpora, Domenico de Micco e Leonardo Leo.
Neapolitan music enjoyed an extraordinary European success starting with the first decades of the 18th century. The contributions to the present volume illustrate the sources and the reception of the Neapolitans, and foremost of Pergolesi, in Dresden, in Bohemia and in Silesia. Pergolesi sources are described down to details of writing, with an eye both to the new critical edition and to historically informed performing practice. Diplomatical correspondence between Dresden and Naples was widely used as a source of musical information and a means of exchanging scores. Far from the Saxon court, the Neapolitan music is encouraged by some prominent Bohemian aristocrats. Different religious houses (cistercians, jesuits) exchange sacred music, variously adapted to local needs. Neapolitan opera is popularised through wandering troupes, coming mostly from Northern Italy. New biographical data and work analyses enrich our knowledge of contemporaries or fellow countrymen of Pergolesi’s such as Giovanni Alberto Ristori, Nicola Porpora, Domenico de Micco and Leonardo Leo.

Table of Contents
Contenuto/Contents: Claudio Bacciagaluppi/Hans-Günter Ottenberg/Luca Zoppelli: Prefazione – Vincenzo De Vivo: Die Pergolesi-Stiftung und -Forschung im Jubiläumsjahr 2010 – Claudio Toscani: Schritte auf dem Weg zu einer neuen textkritischen Ausgabe der Werke Pergolesis – Kai Köpp: Giovanni Battista Pergolesi and the Concept of Musical ‘Orthography’ - Understanding Written and Unwritten Articulation in Eighteenth-Century Music – Jóhannes Ágústsson: Giovanni Alberto Ristori at the Court of Naples 1738-1740 – Paologiovanni Maione: La musica ‘viaggiante’ nelle carte dei ministri napoletani a Dresda nel Settecento – Janice B. Stockigt: Italian Composers Listed in the «Catalogo 1765» («Schürer-Katalog») of the Dresden Hofkirche – Ortrun Landmann: Porpora in Dresden – Stefano Aresi: Porpora tra Dresda e Vienna: i Sei duetti sulla Passione di Cristo – Claudio Bacciagaluppi: Parodies in Pergolesi’s Sacred Music: Some Reflections on Central European Sources – Marc Niubo: Giovanni Battista Pergolesi in Eighteenth-Century Bohemia – Václav Kapsa/Jana Perutková/Jana Spáčilová: Some Remarks on the Relationship of Bohemian Aristocracy to Italian Music at the Time of Pergolesi – Tomasz Jeż: The Reception of Neapolitan Music in the Monastic Centres of Baroque Silesia – Roberto Scoccimarro: The Question of ‘Mixed’ Form in Mass Settings by Jan Dismas Zelenka and ‘Neapolitan’ Composers of the Early Eighteenth Century – Paolo Sullo: La fortuna europea delle raccolte di solfeggi di Leonardo Leo – Alessandro Lattanzi: The Instrumental Music of Domenico de Micco and Its Attribution to Hasse in German Sources – Hans-Günter Ottenberg: Giovanni Battista Pergolesis La Serva padrona und Stabat mater im Spiegel des deutschsprachigen Musikschrifttums des 18. und frühen 19. Jahrhunderts.

Studi Pergolesiani- Pergolesi Studies

    Product form

    £65.25

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £72.50 – you save £7.25 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Claudio Bacciagaluppi, Hans-Günter Ottenberg, Luca Zoppelli

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Studi Pergolesiani- Pergolesi Studies by Claudio Bacciagaluppi

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 04/04/2013
      ISBN13: 9783034312066, 978-3034312066
      ISBN10: 3034312067

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      La musica napoletana conosce uno straordinario successo europeo fin dai primi decenni del Settecento. I contributi raccolti in questo volume presentano le fonti e la fortuna dei Napoletani, e di Pergolesi in particolare, a Dresda, in Boemia e in Slesia. Le fonti pergolesiane vengono esaminate fin nei dettagli di scrittura, tanto in vista della nuova edizione critica quanto nella prospettiva della prassi esecutiva storicamente informata. La corrispondenza diplomatica tra Dresda e Napoli si rivela un canale ricchissimo di scambi di informazioni e di partiture. Lontano dalla corte sassone, per la diffusione della musica napoletana giocano un ruolo essenziale alcune famiglie nobiliari boeme. Le case di ordini religiosi (cistercensi, gesuiti) si scambiano tra Boemia e Slesia moltissime composizioni sacre, variamente adattate secondo i bisogni locali. Le opere napoletane sono popolarizzate dalle compagnie girovaghe di cantanti, che solitamente provengono dall’Italia settentrionale. Nuovi elementi biografici e analisi di opere arricchiscono la nostra conoscenza di conterranei o contemporanei di Pergolesi come Giovanni Alberto Ristori, Nicola Porpora, Domenico de Micco e Leonardo Leo.
      Neapolitan music enjoyed an extraordinary European success starting with the first decades of the 18th century. The contributions to the present volume illustrate the sources and the reception of the Neapolitans, and foremost of Pergolesi, in Dresden, in Bohemia and in Silesia. Pergolesi sources are described down to details of writing, with an eye both to the new critical edition and to historically informed performing practice. Diplomatical correspondence between Dresden and Naples was widely used as a source of musical information and a means of exchanging scores. Far from the Saxon court, the Neapolitan music is encouraged by some prominent Bohemian aristocrats. Different religious houses (cistercians, jesuits) exchange sacred music, variously adapted to local needs. Neapolitan opera is popularised through wandering troupes, coming mostly from Northern Italy. New biographical data and work analyses enrich our knowledge of contemporaries or fellow countrymen of Pergolesi’s such as Giovanni Alberto Ristori, Nicola Porpora, Domenico de Micco and Leonardo Leo.

      Table of Contents
      Contenuto/Contents: Claudio Bacciagaluppi/Hans-Günter Ottenberg/Luca Zoppelli: Prefazione – Vincenzo De Vivo: Die Pergolesi-Stiftung und -Forschung im Jubiläumsjahr 2010 – Claudio Toscani: Schritte auf dem Weg zu einer neuen textkritischen Ausgabe der Werke Pergolesis – Kai Köpp: Giovanni Battista Pergolesi and the Concept of Musical ‘Orthography’ - Understanding Written and Unwritten Articulation in Eighteenth-Century Music – Jóhannes Ágústsson: Giovanni Alberto Ristori at the Court of Naples 1738-1740 – Paologiovanni Maione: La musica ‘viaggiante’ nelle carte dei ministri napoletani a Dresda nel Settecento – Janice B. Stockigt: Italian Composers Listed in the «Catalogo 1765» («Schürer-Katalog») of the Dresden Hofkirche – Ortrun Landmann: Porpora in Dresden – Stefano Aresi: Porpora tra Dresda e Vienna: i Sei duetti sulla Passione di Cristo – Claudio Bacciagaluppi: Parodies in Pergolesi’s Sacred Music: Some Reflections on Central European Sources – Marc Niubo: Giovanni Battista Pergolesi in Eighteenth-Century Bohemia – Václav Kapsa/Jana Perutková/Jana Spáčilová: Some Remarks on the Relationship of Bohemian Aristocracy to Italian Music at the Time of Pergolesi – Tomasz Jeż: The Reception of Neapolitan Music in the Monastic Centres of Baroque Silesia – Roberto Scoccimarro: The Question of ‘Mixed’ Form in Mass Settings by Jan Dismas Zelenka and ‘Neapolitan’ Composers of the Early Eighteenth Century – Paolo Sullo: La fortuna europea delle raccolte di solfeggi di Leonardo Leo – Alessandro Lattanzi: The Instrumental Music of Domenico de Micco and Its Attribution to Hasse in German Sources – Hans-Günter Ottenberg: Giovanni Battista Pergolesis La Serva padrona und Stabat mater im Spiegel des deutschsprachigen Musikschrifttums des 18. und frühen 19. Jahrhunderts.

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account