Angelo Maria Amorevoli

Angelo Maria Amorevoli

Angelo Amorevoli as Solimano (1753)
Born (1716-09-16)16 September 1716
Venice
Died 15 November 1798(1798-11-15) (aged 82)
Dresden
Occupation Opera singer (tenor)
Years active 1729–1771

Angelo Maria Amorevoli (Venice, 16 September 1716 - Dresden, 15 November 1798) was a leading Italian tenor in Baroque opera.

Biography

Angelo Amorevoli began singing in opera seria when he was just thirteen: in 1729 he sang in revivals of the musical dramas, Amore e gratitudine, probably by Flavio Carlo Lanciani, and Ottone in villa by Antonio Vivaldi. The following year he was on the stage in Rome for Porpora’s operas Mitridate and Siface, and in Venice for Hasse’s Dalisa. From 1731 to 1735 he took part in major operatic productions in Turin, Milan, and other towns of northern Italy. From 1736 to 1740 he moved to Naples, where he took part in eleven premières, one of which was Sarro’s Achille in Sciro, the drama that inaugurated the Teatro di San Carlo on November 4, 1737.

In 1739 he traveled to Vienna, where he attracted a lot of attention, primarily with his interpretation of Vivaldi’s Feraspe. On December 26, 1740 he took part in the inauguration of the new Teatro Regio in Turin, performing the part of Mitrane in Francesco Feo's Arsace. In 1741 he made his debut both in Florence, and in London, where he sang several productions at the King's Theatre from October 1741 to May 1743. He returned to Italy from 1744 to 1745 where he was on the stage in Milan. He resolved to move to Dresden in order to be given the chance of singing in Hasse's operas. There, the Hamburg composer would give him the satisfaction of performing the title role in his opera Solimano which was premièred in 1753.

In 1748 Amorevoli visited Vienna again, and there he met the celebrated librettist and great poet Pietro Metastasio, who highly commended his singing ability, and took part in a third theatre inauguration, at the Burgtheater, singing in Gluck's La Semiramide Riconosciuta (Ircano). He then lived in Milan again from 1748 to 1749 and from 1759 to 1764, the year he decided to retire from the stage. Returned definitively to Dresden, he was engaged by the Saxon Court, but only as a chamber and Church singer, which posts he held until about 1771. He died in Dresden in 1798.

Artistic features

Angelo Amorevoli is considered one of the greatest tenors in the first half of the 18th century's European operatic scene and the leader, together with Annibale Pio Fabri (and Francesco Borosini), of tenor revenge in the world of Baroque music drama. Before them, the tenor, which used to show marked baritonal characteristics, was employed in third leading parts, in buffo roles, often interpreting en travesti figures of old women. With the coming of the new tenor class led by Amorevoli, things changed: the vocal range and tessitura employed remained substantially baritonal, reaching the summit of B4 flat. The main change, however, was the unheard-of coloratura virtuosity the new tenor class proved themselves equal to, which enabled the tenors to achieve a real breakthrough, finally conquering leading roles in Baroque operas. These included great roles of fathers, commanders, antagonists villains (the same kind of roles that would later become peculiar to the modern baritone). In this new field, Amorevoli took the lead wherever in Europe he sang, and with the greatest musicians of his era, including Vivaldi and Hasse. Amorevoli worked with Hasse in Dresden for many years. Their collaboration culminated with Segeste's allegro, Solcar pensa un mar sicuro, from the version of Arminio produced in that town in 1745, which was the most acrobatic coloratura aria of tempest that had ever, up to that time, been granted to a male voice.[1]

Roles created

The following list is not complete.[2]

Role Opera Genre Composer Theatre Première’s date
Massimo Ezio dramma per musica Riccardo Broschi Turin, Teatro Regio 26 December 1730
Tempo Achille in Sciro dramma per musica (opera seria) Domenico Natale Sarro Naples, Nuovo Grande Real Teatro San Carlo (inauguration) 4 November 1737
Clistene L'Olimpiade dramma per musica Leonardo Leo Naples, Nuovo Grande Real Teatro San Carlo 19 December 1737
Lycas/Giove Le nozze di Psiche con Amore festa teatrale Leonardo Leo Naples, Nuovo Grande Real Teatro San Carlo 23 June 1738
Fenicio[3] Demetrio opera eroica (pasticcio, 3rd version) Leonardo Leo (Acts 1 and partly 2), Lorenzo Fago, Gian Francesco de Majo, Nicola Bonifacio Logroscino (Act 2), Riccardo Broschi (Act 3) Naples, Nuovo Grande Real Teatro San Carlo 30 June 1738
Osroa Adriano in Siria dramma per musica Giovanni Alberto Ristori Naples, Real Teatro San Carlo 19 December 1739
Latino Il trionfo di Camilla dramma per musica (opera eroica, 1st version) Nicola Porpora Naples, Real Teatro San Carlo 20 January 1740
Mitrane Arsace opera seriain 3 atti Francesco Feo Turin, Nuovo Teatro Regio (inauguration) 26 December 1740
Artabano Artaserse dramma per musica Giuseppe Arena Turin, Nuovo Teatro Regio 21 January 1741
Ircano La Semiramide riconosciuta dramma per musica Christoph Willibald Gluck Vienna, Burgtheater (Theater nächst der Burg, Theater bei der Hofburg, Hofburg-Theater, Kaiserlische Königliche National Hoftheater) (inauguration) 14 May 1748
Manlio Attilio Regolo dramma per musica Johann Adolf Hasse Dresden, Grosses Königliches Opernhaus am Zwingerhof (Hoftheater) 12 January 1750
Dafni Euridice favola pastorale per musica (pasticcio) Niccolò Jommelli, Andrea Bernasconi, Georg Christoph Wagenseil, Ignaz Holzbauer, Johann Adolf Hasse and Baldassarre Galuppi Vienna, Hof-Burgtheater 26 Julay 1750
Solimano Solimano dramma per musica (1st version) Johann Adolf Hasse Dresden, Grosses Königliches Opernhaus am Zwingerhof (Hoftheater) 5 February 1753

Sources

Notes

  1. R. Celletti, op cit, p 129.
  2. For a wider list, cf. Angelo Amorevoli/Ruoli Creati in the Italian Wikipedia, or Angelo Amorevoli/Repertoire in the German Wikipedia.
  3. According to the original libretto published by Francesco Ricciardo in Naples, 1738 (cf Internet Culturale and Italianopera.org).
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