Lettera amorosa
In early modern Italy, letters were not only written and read but, in some cases, sung. Musical settings of love letters rekindled a complex kind of vocality which was rooted in the letters of antiquity and endured in the musical sub-genre of the lettera amorosa. Epistolary poetry served to transform, or, to echo Achillini's lettera set by Monteverdi (1567–1643), to 'distill' a lover's thoughts and emotions into verse, and the music that set it was equally transformative. The history of musical letters spans several centuries. It begins in the early sixteenth with a setting of Ovid's Heroides by Tromboncino; returns in the early seventeenth through the lettere amorose of Monteverdi, D'India, and Frescobaldi; and ends with epistolary cantatas by Carissimi, Melani, and Domenico Scarlatti. This Element traces the breadth and significance of the musical love letter with a focus on the provocative lettere amorose of the seventeenth century.
Product details
March 2025Paperback
9781009446785
104 pages
228 × 151 × 6 mm
0.17kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- List of Figures and Music Examples
- Prologue
- 1. Voices of Antiquity
- 2. The Epistolary Madrigal
- 3. Monteverdi's Love Letters
- 4. Lettera amorosa in the Seventeenth Century
- 5. The Epistolary Cantata
- Epilogue
- Bibliography.