Musica a Palazzo (Music at the Palace) wants to recreate teh magic of the ‘Salotto Musicale’ or ‘Mucial Parlour’: a piano, a few instruments and one or two singers who gave life to memorable evenings.
LA TRAVIATA
Tuesday – Thursday – Sunday
8.30PM – 2 hours
Act I: Salone delle Feste / Act II: Sala Tiepolo / Act III: Camera con Alcova Reale
Progressive opera: every act is in a different room
The Traviata is bases on the novel ‘La Dame aux Camelias’ by Alexandre Duma fils, published in 1848 telling the story of Marie Duplessis, a noted courtesan an idol of the 1840s’ Parisian society.
With La Traviata, Verdi created history’s first major opera dealing with a contemporary social theme. This was only one of the work’s several aspects that proved unpalatable for the audience at its premiere in Venice, in 1853: beyond that, the audience was similarly shocked by the principal part being assigned to a courtesan, and that moreover, she was portrayed as a heroine.
The premiere ended consequently by a fiasco, nonetheless, soon thereafter, Verdi’s La Traviata scored its first triumphsm, and ever since then has remained a hugely loved repertoire staple.
This production with its refined costumes offers exquisite moments of involvement with the viewing public while walking through the rooms and the ‘stanze di Traviata’.
DUETTI d’AMORE – LOVE DUETS
Monday -Friday
8.30PM – 1.5 hours
Act I: Sala Tiepolo / Act II: Camera con Alcova Reale
Progressive opera: every act is in a different room
Among the most beautiful voices in Italy interpret La Boheme, manon Lescaut, La Traviata and Cavallera Rusticana
Languid love and burning passion in the duets taken from Italian melodramas are exalted by the magnificient colours of the Tiepolo frescoes.
‘Intermezzo’ – Cavalleria Rusticana di Pietro Mascagni
‘Quando men vo’ – La Boheme di Giacomo Puccini
‘Liebesleid’ di Fritz Kreisler
‘Le Cygne’ di Camille Saint-Saens
‘Intermezzo’ – Manon Lescaut di Giacomo Puccini
‘Tace il labbro’ – La Vedova Allegra di Franz Lehar
‘Musica Proibita’ di Stanislao Gastaldon
‘Madamigella Valery’ – La Traviata di Giuseppe Verdi
‘Meditation’ – Thais di Jules Massenet
‘La ci darem la mano’ – Don Giovanni di W.A. Mozart
IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA
Wednesday – Saturday
8.30PM – 2.15 hours
Who hasn’t yet heard of Figaro, the famous barber of Seville?
When young Count Almaviva leaves Madrid for Seville to pursue the call of his heart, he not only leaves the court and his family but also the arranged marriage they would make for him. He woos his beloved in disguise to insure that if she will have him it will not be for his title or money, but because she loves him for himself.
By portraying the count’s title and wealth as an impediment to be disguised, Beaumarchais gave voice to the rising revolutionary tide of the 1780s which would soon swamp the once thriumphant Enlightenment and its decaving aristocracy. Similtaneously, his play heralded the beginning of the Romantic era and the rise of democracy.
His portrayal of the Count’s and Rosina’s happy union attacks the aristocracy by endorsing the idea that feelings not property are the desirable basis for marriage. It affirms that in feelings, particularly in love, we are all equal.
Staged amid the exquisite setting of paintings, furnishings and architectural details of the splendid Palazza Barbarigo-Monotto.
Extraordinary voices of virtuoso singers in an evening of sparkling gaiety.
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