If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
To borrow from Snooker-speak, here is a shot to nothing.
Is the answer "Les"?
Ah yes, Pope Les I...! A diamond geezahh...
Sorry. Couldn't resist. It certainly fits element 2 of the question. But the others....??
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
His magnum opus has been recorded by LAF and would appear to involve large numbers of castrati from the papal choir
You have got the right answer but the third clue is not quite what I was thinking. However, as the answer is correct, I’d say Yes, and over to you for M.
The work I was thinking was Il Sant' Alessio. It had seven (or was it eight?) countertenors for the performance.
You have got the right answer but the third clue is not quite what I was thinking. However, as the answer is correct, I’d say Yes, and over to you for M.
The work I was thinking was Il Sant' Alessio. It had seven (or was it eight?) countertenors for the performance.
Sant' Alessio was indeed the work I was referring to, although as I'm sure you know, they would have been real castrati, not countertenors, in the original performance. I couldn't find any reference to his papal employment other than that he may have sung in the papal choir.
Sant' Alessio was indeed the work I was referring to, although as I'm sure you know, they would have been real castrati, not countertenors, in the original performance. I couldn't find any reference to his papal employment other than that he may have sung in the papal choir.
Ah, no. I didn’t know the work by that name. I have no exact date of the staging but this is the DVD version performed by Les Arts Florissants.
Benjamin Lazar's production stays just the right side of both camp and morbidity. An acquired taste, but beautifully done
As for the papal employment: In 1624, Pope Urban VIII (a Barberini) assigned him clerical duties at Saint Peter's Basilica and appointed him maestro di cappella at Santa Maria ai Monti, in Rome. For performance of these duties the Pope granted him a permanent cleric's benefice (Bother, I didn’t keep the link).
I admit that this was rather an obscure reference. I only remembered this as one of the reviews of the performance had a headline, ‘Pope’s assistant wrote an all castrati opera’ or something to the effect.
I'm rather afraid further outbursts of 'Corrieitis' can't be ruled out if some of us find some questions too difficult to start with - or too frequently revised. As far as I can gather, somebody has answered part or all of the 'L' question and we await a hopefully not-too-cryptic 'M'. I'm just about to watch the second half of the Bach B Minor Mass on DVD, but am recording tonight's Coronation Street (just in case...)
Comment