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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 707<br />

most famous—a superspectacle in five acts and sixty-six scenes, including several<br />

ballets in each act and requiring twenty-four separate stage sets. And thus<br />

opera developed in Italy. The list of composers is long and the bibliography of<br />

their many works inspired by classical antiquity impressive; particularly startling<br />

is the number of repetitions of favorite subjects.<br />

Many of the operatic composers of the early period wrote cantatas as well.<br />

As examples of this musical form, we shall mention three works by Johann Sebastian<br />

Bach (1685-1750) in the catalogue of his secular cantatas. Some of these<br />

he himself entitled dramma per musica, and modern critics have gone so far as to<br />

label them "operettas." In Cantata 201 (Der Streit zzvischen Phoebus una Pan), Bach<br />

presents the contest between Phoebus and Pan as a musical satire aimed at a<br />

hostile critic of his works, Johann Adolph Scheibe. The text is derived from<br />

Ovid's version. Mt. Tmolus and Momus, god of mirth, award the victory to Pan,<br />

while Midas is punished with a pair of ass' ears. The "Hunting Cantata" 208 has<br />

the myth of Diana and Endymion as its theme. Finally, Cantata 213 (Hercules auf<br />

dem Scheidewege) depicts Hercules at the crossroads; he rejects the blandishments<br />

of Pleasure in favor of the hardship, virtue, and renown promised to him by<br />

Virtue (see p. 540). The more familiar Christmas Oratorio uses the musical themes<br />

of this cantata.<br />

Blow, Purcell, Lully, and Handel. In England during the Baroque period, plays<br />

with incidental music and ballet became very much the fashion; these led eventually<br />

to the evolution of opera in a more traditional sense. John Blow (1649-1708)<br />

wrote a musical-dramatic composition, Venus and Adonis. Although the work<br />

bears the subtitle "A masque for the entertainment of the king," it is in reality<br />

a pastoral opera constructed along the most simple lines.<br />

It was Blow's pupil, Henry Purcell (1659-1695), who created a masterpiece<br />

that has become one of the landmarks in the history of opera, Dido and Aeneas.<br />

The work was composed for Josias Priest's Boarding School for Girls, in Chelsea;<br />

the libretto by Nahum Tate comes from Book 4 of Vergil's Aeneid. 2 The artful<br />

economy and tasteful blending of the various elements in Purcell's score have<br />

often been admired. Dido's lament ("When I am laid in Earth") as she breathes<br />

her last is a noble and touching aria.<br />

In France, Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632-1687), a giant in the development of<br />

opera, produced Cadmus et Hermione in collaboration with the poet Philippe<br />

Quinault; this was the first of a series of fifteen such tragic operas (twelve<br />

of them to texts by Quinault). Some of the other titles confirm the extent of the<br />

debt to Greece and Rome: Alceste, Thésée, Atys, Proserpine, Persée, Phaéton, Acis<br />

et Galatée.<br />

Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) was the most significant heir to the<br />

mantle of Lully. He too created many operas and opera-ballets on Greek and<br />

Roman themes, for example, Hippolyte et Aricie, Castor et Pollux, Dardanus, and<br />

Les Fêtes d'Hébé.

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