FRANCESCO BARTOLOMEO CONTI – L’Issipile

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FRANCESCO BARTOLOMEO CONTI

L’ISSIPILE

Dramma per musica in 3 atti.

Article nr.
BR I

Libretto: Pietro Metastasio
Balletti by Nicola Matteis Jr.

Full score (A4, adhesive binding, 215 pages)

Language: Italian

Edition and Introduction by Flavio Ferri-Benedetti

CAST
Issipile (S)
Rodope (S)
Eurinome (A)
Giasone (A)
Learco (A)
Toante (T)

Orchestra: Ob I, II ripieno; Violini I e II, Viola, Bassi; Fagotto Obbligato; Bc.

Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (Florence 1681 – Vienna 1732), theorbist and composer at the Viennese Imperial Court, was the first musician to use this very peculiar libretto by Pietro Metastasio (Rome 1698 – Vienna 1782), the most important librettist of the late baroque / early classical epoque and one of Italy’s finest poets. The premiere was performed in 1732 by a fantastic cast of well-known singers in Vienna, i.e. the famous tenor Borghi as King Thoas or the two alto castrati Minelli and Casati, both very appreciated by Italian and Austrian audiences. Musically, the setting written by Conti is fascinating. A relatively high presence of recitativi accompagnati, colourful, highly-melodic arias with, from time to time, very articulated counterpoint.
Our main source is much probably a unicum – a manuscript present at the Austrian National Museum in Vienna: three tomes decorated with gold, in very precise, clean hand-writing.