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La traviata - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search 1853 opera by Giuseppe Verdi La traviata (Italian pronunciation: [la traˈvjaːta]; The Fallen Woman)[1] is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi set to an Italian libretto by Fran

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Libretto

Verdi - La Traviata Libretto (English-Italian).pdf
0.46MB

 

 

라 트라비아타 - 나무위키

이 문서에 스포일러가 포함되어 있습니다. 이 문서가 설명하는 작품이나 인물 등에 대한 줄거리, 결말, 반전 요소 등을 직·간접적으로 포함하고 있습니다. 프랑스 파리의 사교계를 주름잡던 코

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Roles


Violetta Valéry, a courtesan - soprano
Alfredo Germont, a young bourgeois from a provincial family - tenor
Giorgio Germont, Alfredo's father - baritone
Flora Bervoix, Violetta's friend - mezzo-soprano
Annina, Violetta's maid - soprano
Gastone, Alfredo's friend - tenor
Barone Douphol, Violetta's lover, a rival of Alfredo - baritone
Marchese d'Obigny - bass
Dottore Grenvil - bass
Giuseppe, Violetta's servant - tenor
Flora's servant - bass G. Tona
Commissioner - bass

 

Violetta, at a party in her house, is moved to learn that the young Alfredo Germont is in love with her. There are, however, hints already that she is suffering from consumption. They set up house together in the country, but Violetta secretly sells her jewels to meet the expenses they now incur. Alfredo learns of this from Violetta's maid, Annina, and goes to Paris to raise money. In his absence his father arrives, seeking to persuade Violetta to leave Alfredo, whose behaviour prejudices the marriage chances of his sister, as well as his own prospects. Violetta sacrifices her own feelings and accepts an invitation from her friend Flora Bervoix which will take her back to her old life, now under the protection of Baron Douphol. She leaves a note for Alfredo, telling him of her decision, while old Germont tries to comfort his son, without revealing anything of Violetta's true motives. Alfredo then bursts into the party at Flora's house and insults Violetta, whom he finds with her new protector. She falls back, fainting, as the second act closes. In the third act Violetta is at home, near to death. Germont has told his son of the sacrifice she had made, and Alfredo now returns, holding her in his arms as she dies.

La traviata (The Fallen Woman) is one of those operas that has retained a firm position in current repertoire, never failing in its effect. The prelude to the first act uses the tender and melancholy music that will later precede Violetta's death, as well as her plea to him to love her. The first of these returns in the Prelude to the third act. At Violetta's there is a lively drinking-song or BrindisiLibiamo (Let us drink), led by Alfredo, and as the guests go into the next room, he declares his love for her In Un dì felice (One happy day). Her response to his declarations is heard in her later reflective Ah, fors'è lui (Ah perhaps it is he my heart desires). In the second act Alfredo considers the happiness that life with Violetta has brought him in De'miei bollenti spiriti (Fervent my dream of ecstasy). Germont's attempts to remind his son of their home, Di Provenza il mar, il suol (The sea, the land of Provence) have provided baritones with a moving aria, and there is later contrast in the masquerading gypsy and Spanish dances at the house of Flora Bervoix. There is, of course, much else in a work, which, although set in 1700, might equally be supposed to have a contemporary setting and relevance in the Paris of the 1850s, an element of realism less apparent in historical dramas of kings and princes.

 

La traviata discography - Wikipedia

The following is a partial discography of the many audio[1] and video[2] recordings of Giuseppe Verdi's opera, La traviata. Based on the 1848 novel La dame aux Camélias by Alexandre Dumas, fils, La traviata has been a staple of the operatic repertoire sin

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Reference

▣ "E strano, e strano...Follie, follie...Sempre Libera"

        - Callas, RAI Turin, Gabriele Santini (1953)

        - Callas, La Scala, Carlo Maria Giulini (1955)

        - Callas, Theatro San Carlos Lisbon, Franco Ghione (1958)

        - Moffo, Rome Opera orchestra and chorus, Giuseppe Patanè (1968)

        - Moffo, ... (1970-1972)

        - Cotrubaș Bayerisches Staatsorchester, Carlos Kleiber (1976)

        

▣ "Teneste la promessa... Addio del passato"

       - Callas, RAI Turin, Gabriele Santini (1953)

       - Callas, La Scala , Carlo Maria Giulini (1955)

       - Callas, Theatro San Carlos Lisbon, Franco Ghione (1958)

       - Zeani, Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Gianandrea Gavazzeni (1957)

       - Tebaldi, Membri dell'Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala, Antonino Votto (????)

       - Tebaldi, ... (1950's)

       - Olivero, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Fulvio Vernizzi (6 May 1967)

       - Cotrubaș Bayerisches Staatsorchester, Carlos Kleiber (1976)

       - Gheorghiu, Orchestra of the Royal Opera, Covent Garden, Sir Georg Solti (1994)

 

 

Renata Tebaldi - Addio del passato 1950's.rar
5.04MB