21046381
Vasco de Gama
21046381
21046381
21046381
Copyright Material for Preview Only - Sheet Music Plus
Opera, Partitur, Kritischer Bericht and Klavierauszug
SKU: BT.SY-5607-KPL
Herausgegeben von Jürgen Selk. Composed by Giacomo Meyerbeer. Arranged by Jürgen Selk. UMPC Critical Editions. Opera or Operetta. Set of Books. Composed 2018. Ricordi #SY 5607-KPL. Published by Ricordi (BT.SY-5607-KPL).
Synopsis: After an expedition to the New World, the Portuguese navigator Vasco de Gama is thought to be lost. His fiancée Ines is now to marry the inquisitor Don Pedro, but Vasco has survived and returns home with a pair of Indian slaves, Selica and Nelusco. He is imprisoned with them as a result of an altercation with his superiors. Selicia, in fact an Indian queen, falls in love with him. This sparks the jealousy of Nelusco, who wants to kill him but is prevented from doing so at the last minute by Selica. Through her marriage to Don Pedro, Ines is able to secure the release of Vasco, who she still loves. They all go on a discovery voyage to Africa but are shipwrecked off the coast of India. The locals rescue Selica and recognize her as their queen. She enters into marriage with Vasco, who believes Ines to be dead. When Ines is found alive however, Selica regonizes their love and allows them to return to Portugal. She kills herself with a poisonous tree, and Nelusco follows her to her death.
Genesis: When Meyerbeer decided in 1851 to introduce Vasco de Gama (French), the naval officer and piomeer of the sea route to India, as the title character of his unfinished Africaine Opera and to rework his text accordingly, he wanted – as he wrote to his librettist Eugėne – “to place the piece on an entirely new foundation and against a historic and noble background.” More concretely, that meant linking the love triangle story to themes of colonialism and consequently translating a melodrama into a historical opera. As was the case previously, Meyerbeer did not take sides within history but rather condemned it wholly as the scene of religiously embellished power struggles. It became one of his most popular operas in the late 19th and early 20th Century.
This critical editions includes metronome and tempo indications that were missing in the autograph have been added according to research into Meyerbeer, while discrepancies in the surviving text and name changes have been indicated. The autograph that serves as the source was split across two locations, Kraków and Berlin. In addition to Meyerbeer’s handwriting, there are also handwritten notes and deletions by another hand, including from François Joseph Fétis, who premiered the opera posthumously. Copies of the score from Paris and Yale University, as well as sketches from the Staatsbibliothek Berlin, were also consulted.
Opera, Partitur, Kritischer Bericht and Klavierauszug
SKU: BT.SY-5607-KPL
Herausgegeben von Jürgen Selk. Composed by Giacomo Meyerbeer. Arranged by Jürgen Selk. UMPC Critical Editions. Opera or Operetta. Set of Books. Composed 2018. Ricordi #SY 5607-KPL. Published by Ricordi (BT.SY-5607-KPL).
Synopsis: After an expedition to the New World, the Portuguese navigator Vasco de Gama is thought to be lost. His fiancée Ines is now to marry the inquisitor Don Pedro, but Vasco has survived and returns home with a pair of Indian slaves, Selica and Nelusco. He is imprisoned with them as a result of an altercation with his superiors. Selicia, in fact an Indian queen, falls in love with him. This sparks the jealousy of Nelusco, who wants to kill him but is prevented from doing so at the last minute by Selica. Through her marriage to Don Pedro, Ines is able to secure the release of Vasco, who she still loves. They all go on a discovery voyage to Africa but are shipwrecked off the coast of India. The locals rescue Selica and recognize her as their queen. She enters into marriage with Vasco, who believes Ines to be dead. When Ines is found alive however, Selica regonizes their love and allows them to return to Portugal. She kills herself with a poisonous tree, and Nelusco follows her to her death.
Genesis: When Meyerbeer decided in 1851 to introduce Vasco de Gama (French), the naval officer and piomeer of the sea route to India, as the title character of his unfinished Africaine Opera and to rework his text accordingly, he wanted – as he wrote to his librettist Eugėne – “to place the piece on an entirely new foundation and against a historic and noble background.” More concretely, that meant linking the love triangle story to themes of colonialism and consequently translating a melodrama into a historical opera. As was the case previously, Meyerbeer did not take sides within history but rather condemned it wholly as the scene of religiously embellished power struggles. It became one of his most popular operas in the late 19th and early 20th Century.
This critical editions includes metronome and tempo indications that were missing in the autograph have been added according to research into Meyerbeer, while discrepancies in the surviving text and name changes have been indicated. The autograph that serves as the source was split across two locations, Kraków and Berlin. In addition to Meyerbeer’s handwriting, there are also handwritten notes and deletions by another hand, including from François Joseph Fétis, who premiered the opera posthumously. Copies of the score from Paris and Yale University, as well as sketches from the Staatsbibliothek Berlin, were also consulted.
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