Italian-Style Opera Houses: A Historical Review
Abstract
:1. The Social-Historical Context
1.1. The Birth of the Genre: The Early Age of Opera House
“Giravano d’intorno cinque file di loggie l’una sovraposta all’altra con parapetti avanti a balaustri di marmo …Le due piú alte, e piú lontane file [di logge] erano ripiene di cittadinanza, nella terza sedevano i signori Scolari, e i nobili stranieri, il secondo come luogo piú degno era dei Sig. Rettori e de’ Nobili veneti, e nel primo se ne stavano le gentildonne, e i principali gentilhuomini della cittá”.(Five tiers of boxes went round, one on top of the other, with marble balustrades. The upmost and furthest two tiers [of boxes] were stuffed with ordinary citizens, in the third one sat Scholars and foreign nobility, the second was reserved to Rectors and noblemen of the Venetian region, and in the first sat the gentlewomen, and main gentlemen from the city).
1.2. The Influence of Italian Opera House Outside of Italy
“je n’ai adopté aucun principe […] je ne me suis basé sur aucune théorie […] c’est du hasard seul que j’attends ou l’insuccés ou la réussite”(I have not adopted any principle […] I did not base myself on any theory […], I wait for either failure or success by mere chance).
1.3. The 20th Century
2. Italian-Style Opera Houses: A Chronotaxis
2.1. Dissemination
- 1585–1637
- Court theatres of Northern Italy, unopened to the public. They host the early operas, played by instruments and voices different from the today ones. Despite this, these early-age theatres get almost all the peculiarities of the future opera house. For this reason, they were exhaustively measured and simulated by scholars [5].
- 1637–1800
- Public theatres, opened earlier in Venice and later in the main cities. This period marked the evolution of the form. The scholars discussed and wrote on the best shape, the right dimension and the proper materials [27]. Opera houses were built and quickly demolished, often due to fires. This may be viewed as a genetic selection: only the best-sounding theatres were rebuilt using the same materials and techniques, otherwise different ways to build were tested [42]. The interest of people in opera increased during this period, leading to the need for larger opera houses. The goal of theatre-designers was to assure the best stage-visibility for a largest number of people. This means having the widest proscenium arch with respect to the hall dimensions. The horse-shoe shape emerged as the best compromise between these two reasons. Most of the opera houses in the largest cities were build in this period: la Pergola in Florence (1656) [73], Argentina in Roma (1732), San Carlo in Naples (1737, burned in 1816 and rebuilt in 1817) [74,75], Regio in Torino (1740, burned in 1936), Comunale in Bologna (1763), [21,23,73,76,77], La Scala in Milan (1778) [73,78,79], La Fenice in Venice (1792, burned in 1836 and rebuilt in 1837, burned again in 1996) [80].
- 1800–1925
- Until 1861, Italy was still divided into pre-unitarian states. In this period the theatrical form was well defined, and it was replied in order to have a opera house in each town. As shown in Figure 5, this dissemination process varied depending on pre-unitarian state, earlier in the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, then in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany and in the Papal State, later in the Kingdom of Two-Sicilies and in the Kingdom of Sardinia. There were social and cultural reasons to this temporal misalignment, but after the Italian unification the differences were diminished. In Italy, opera played a role of unification between people who spoke slightly different languages and had somewhat different cultures. For instance, during the Risorgimento process, the sentence “W V.E.R.D.I.” was used also as acronym, meaning “W Vittorio Emanuele, King of Italy”. Furthermore, some G. Verdi’s operas, such as Nabucco (1842) or I Lombardi alla Prima Crociata (1843), hidden the revolutionary instances of the Lombard people which was under the Austrian government until 1861. It should be noted the case of peripheral regions of the Papal State—corresponding today to Umbria, Marche and Romagna regions—in which each city, large or little town was provided by its own opera house. A huge number of these small-sized theatres still exist. Some of them were surveyed by local studies, such as in the case of Campania [81], Romagna [20], Marche [82], Puglia [83], and Veneto [84]. Due to the well-defined form, architects repeated the same project with few variations. Indeed, theatres built in the same geographical area and in the same years often shared the same workers and same building techniques. Due to the large number of small/mid-sized opera house, a “regional” typology can be identified.Moreover, several large-sized theatre were built at the end of the 19th century in Rome (from 1871) and in the South of Italy. Among others, they should be mentioned the Costanzi theatre in the new Rome (1880, renowned in 1928) [85], the Bellini theatre in Catania (1890) [86], the Massimo theatre in Palermo (1897) which is still today the largest Italian opera house—and the Petruzzelli theatre in Bari (1902, burned in 1992). The design of these latter opera houses was influenced by the instances of most recent European opera houses. There were both boxes and galleries—two tiers of galleries instead of the Loggione. The scenic arch was much wider than previously, as in the case of Massimo theatre in Figure 6. Indeed, the Verdian orchestra was larger than the previous tradition [87,88] an the soloists needed to increase their sound strength. In order to reach the proper balance, architects extended the stage, through the so-called proscenium, below the arch. This latter was tilted for two reasons: to reflect the singer’s voice on the audience and avoid the flutter echo effects for the orchestra. It should be noted that in some cases, such as the Costanzi and Massimo theatres, the orchestra floor can be also lowered, as “the most recent German theatres” [48].
- 1925–today
- Opera houses were replaced by cinemas. Often, opera houses were converted to cinemas and then progressively abandoned. Sometimes, such in the case of the Romagna in the 1970–1980s [89], the refurbishing of a group of these abandoned opera houses was managed by local government. Otherwise, the restoration has been based on a public debate [90]. Several opera houses, damaged by bombs during the WWII, had to be rebuilt. Most of the remaining historical theatres needed refurbishments due to age, or adjustments to the needs of new kind of performances. These two points involved the acoustician debate, and will be treated in the next sections.
2.2. Refurbishments
2.3. New Buildings
3. A Taxonomy of Surveys, and Some Unresolved Instances
4. About Performers and Music inside of Opera Houses
4.1. The Evolution of the Orchestra, and Orchestra Pit
“Tutta questa moltitudine d’instrumenti […] rende cosi poco suono, che appena si ode da’ più vicini alla scena”(All this multitude of instruments […] yields so little sound, that can only just be heard from closer to the scene).
4.2. The Repertory and the Availability of Anechoic Recordings
5. Final Considerations
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
Early Decay Time | |
G | Sound Strength |
Sound Strength integrated over the direct field and the early reflections | |
Sound Strength integrated the late reverberated part of the impulse response | |
Inter-Aural Crosscorrelation Coefficient | |
Cosine-Lateral fraction | |
T | Reverberation time |
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USA | Russia | Germany | France | Italy | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | New York | 277 | Moscow | 616 | Berlin | 625 | Paris | 429 | Milan | 170 |
2 | San Francisco | 86 | St Petersburg | 539 | Hamburg | 419 | Lyon | 87 | Rome | 154 |
3 | Philadelphia | 70 | Ekaterinburg | 94 | München | 396 | Marseille | 60 | Venice | 153 |
4 | Chicago | 69 | Novosibirsk | 71 | Dresden | 357 | Strasbourg | 55 | Trieste | 137 |
5 | Houston | 63 | Samara | 69 | Erfurt | 194 | Toulouse | 46 | Florence | 132 |
… | … | … | … | … | … | |||||
10 | Seattle | 45 | Rostov-on-Don | 41 | Hannover | 161 | Nice | 31 | Bologna | 90 |
Theatre(s) | Year | Size | Measurement | Repository |
---|---|---|---|---|
Olimpico, Vicenza | 1585 | mid | TCS [4] TCGS [5] | CAD, IRs [125] |
All’antica, Sabbioneta | 1590 | small | TCS [4] TCGS [5] | CAD, IRs [125] |
Farnese, Parma | 1628 | large | TCS [4] TCGS [5] | CAD, IRs [125] |
La Pergola, Florence | 1656 | mid | TCS [73] | |
Malibran, Venice | 1678 | mid | TG [126] | |
del Pavone, Perugia | 1717 | mid | TCGS [44] | |
Filarmonico, Verona | 1732 | mid | TC [44] | |
San Carlo, Napoli | 1737 | large | TCG [44,74,75] | |
Verdi, Padova | 1751 | mid | TC [127] | |
Accademico, Castelfranco V. | 1758 | small | TC [44,128] | |
Rossini, Lugo | 1761 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Comunale, Bologna | 1763 | mid | TCGS [21,73] TCGS [22,44,77] TCGS [23] | CAD [130] |
Court, Caserta | 1769 | small | TC [131] | |
Fraschini, Pavia | 1773 | mid | TCGS [25,44] | |
Mercadante, Napoli | 1777 | mid | TC [26,44] | |
La Scala, Milano | 1778 | large | TCGS [68] TCS [73] T [78] TCGS [44,79] | |
Morlacchi, Perugia | 1781 | mid | TCGS [44] | |
Stignani, Imola | 1782 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Zandonai, Rovereto | 1786 | mid | T [44] | |
Masini, Faenza | 1788 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
dell’Aquila, Fermo | 1790 | mid | TS [77] | |
Abbado, Ferrara | 1797 | mid | TCGS [44,132] | |
Verdi, Trieste | 1801 | mid | TCS [44,84,133] | |
Grande, Brescia | 1810 | mid | TCG [44,134] | |
Sociale, Como | 1813 | mid | TC [25,44] | |
Rossini, Pesaro | 1818 | mid | TC [96] | |
Sociale, Trento | 1819 | mid | TC [127] | |
Verdi, S. Severo | 1819 | mid | TCGS [83] | |
Garibaldi, Gallipoli | 1825 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Regio, Parma | 1829 | large | TGCS [44,135] | |
Bonci, Cesena | 1846 | mid | TC [136] TCG [44,77] TCGS [20,129] | |
Petrarca, Arezzo | 1833 | mid | TC [137] | |
Milanollo, Savigliano | 1836 | small | TC [138] | |
Marrucino, Chieti | 1818 | small | TC [139] | |
La Fenice, Venezia | 1837 | mid | TCGS [80] | |
Garibaldi, Lucera | 1837 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Traetta, Bitonto | 1838 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Civico, Tortona | 1838 | small | TC [138] | |
Dragoni, Meldola | 1838 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Fenaroli, Lanciano | 1841 | small | TC [139] | |
Pavarotti, Modena | 1841 | mid | [44] | |
di Bartolo, Buti | 1842 | small | T [44,140] | |
Goldoni, Bagnacavallo | 1845 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Alighieri, Ravenna | 1852 | mid | TCGS [20,91,129] | |
V. Emanuele, Messina | 1852 | mid | [94,141] | |
Verdi, Florence | 1854 | large | TCS [73] | |
Piccinini, Bari | 1854 | mid | TCGS [44,83,142] | |
Baudi, Selve in Vigone | 1855 | small | TC [138] | |
Valli, Reggio Emilia | 1857 | mid | TCS [44,97] [143] | |
Alfieri, Asti | 1860 | mid | TCG [44,144] | |
Chiari, Cervia | 1860 | small | TCGS [20,129] |
Theatre(s) | Year | Size | Measurement | Repository |
---|---|---|---|---|
Guerrini, Benevento | 1862 | small | TC [44,127] | |
Menotti, Spoleto | 1864 | mid | TC [93] | |
Comunale, Cesenatico | 1865 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Verdi, Pisa | 1867 | mid | T [44,140] | |
Mercadante, Cerignola | 1868 | mid | TCGS [83] | |
Verdi, Busseto | 1868 | small | T [114] | |
Del Monaco, Treviso | 1869 | mid | TCS [44,84,94] | |
Verdi, Salerno | 1872 | mid | [44,75,145] | |
Curci, Barletta | 1872 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Paisiello, Lecce | 1872 | small | TCGS [44,83,142] | |
R. Margherita, Caltanissetta | 1875 | small | TC [127] | |
Rossetti, Trieste | 1878 | mid | TC [127] | |
Comunale, Russi | 1887 | small | TCGS [20,129] | |
Bellini, Catania | 1890 | large | TC [86,127] | |
Van Vesterhout, Mola | 1896 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Massimo, Palermo | 1897 | large | TC [127] | |
Sociale, Rovigo | 1904 | mid | TCS [44,84] | |
Comunale, Nardó | 1908 | small | TCGS [83] | |
Civico, Schio | 1909 | small | TC [44,84] | |
Opera, Roma | (1928) | large | TCG [44,85] | |
Comunale, Adria | 1935 | mid | TCS [44,84] | |
Duse, Bologna | (1943) | mid | TCG [146] | CAD, IRs [147] |
TEA, Bologna | 1975 | large | TCGS [73] | |
Carlo Felice, Genova | (1991) | large | TC [44] | |
Lirico, Cagliari | 1993 | large | TCG [44,109] | |
Arcimboldi, Milano | 2001 | large | TCGS [44,110] | |
La Fenice, Venezia | (2003) | mid | TCS [44,84,133] | |
Garibaldi, Bisceglie | (2003) | mid | TCGS [83] | |
Verdi, Brindisi | (2006) | large | TCGS [83] | |
Comunale, Gradisca d’Isonzo | (2009) | mid | TC [44,148] | |
Petruzzelli, Bari | (2009) | large | TC [105] | |
Maggio Musicale Fiorentino | 2011 | large | TC [111] | |
Eschilo, Gela | (2013) | small | TC [149] | |
Civico, Schio | (2014) | small | TC [90] | |
Galli, Rimini | (2018) | mid | TC [107,108] |
Ref. | Theatre(s) | Year | Country |
---|---|---|---|
[18] | Bayreuth Markgräfliches | 1750 | Germany |
[18] | L’Opéra Royal Versailles | 1770 | France |
[157] | Grand Theatre, Bordeaux | 1780 | France |
[158] | S. Carlos, Lisbon | 1793 | Portugal |
[159] | Palace Theatre, Archangelskoje | 1818 | Russia |
[160] | Bolshoi, Moscow | 1825 | Russia |
[161] | Teatro Principal, Valencia | 1832 | Spain |
[162] | Opera House, Wroclaw | 1841 | Poland |
[158] | Donna Maria II, Lisbon | 1846 | Portugal |
[160] | Mariinsky, St. Petersburg | 1860 | Russia |
[160] | Opera House, Saratov | 1860 | Russia |
[158] | Trindade, Lisbon | 1867 | Portugal |
[160] | Opera House, Voronezh | 1870 | Russia |
[158] | Sá de Miranda, Viana do Castelo | 1879 | Portugal |
[68] | Hungarian State Opera House | 1884 | Hungary |
[158] | Coliseu dos Recreios, Lisbon | 1890 | Portugal |
[158] | Garcia Resende, Evora | 1892 | Portugal |
[158] | S. Luiz, Lisbon | 1894 | Portugal |
[158] | Viriato, Viseu | 19th Century | Portugal |
[59,68] | Colon, Buenos Aires | 1908 | Argentina |
[163] | Grand Theatre, Poznan | 1910 | Poland |
[160] | Opera House, Ekaterinburg | 1912 | Russia |
[164] | Municipal Theatre, Lima | 1920 | Perú |
[158] | S. Joao, Oporto | 1920 | Portugal |
[160] | Music Hall, St. Petersburg | 1928 | Russia |
[160] | Maliy, St. Petersburg | 1944 | Russia |
[165] | Teatro Argentino, La Plata | 1999 | Argentina |
[166] | Opera House, Astana | 2013 | Kazakistan |
Year | Opera House | Performance | Strings | Woodwinds | Brasses | Others | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vli | vla | cl | db | fl | ob | cla | bas | ho | tp | tb | perc | harp | |||
1720 | St. Moise, Venice | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | |||||||
1741 | San Carlo, Naples | 38 | 8 | 2 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | ||||||
1758 | Argentina, Rome | 16 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 3 | |||||||
1770 | Ducale, Milan | Mozart: Mitridate Re di Ponto | 14 + 14 | 6 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 2 | yes | ||
1778 | Comunale, Bologna | 25 | 8 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 4 | 4 | yes | |||
1778 | La Scala, Milan (opening) | Salieri: Europa riconosciuta | 30 | 8 | 5 | 8 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 4 | |||
1797 | San Carlo, Naples | 25 | 4 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4 | ||||||
1818 | Covent Garden, London | 8 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | yes | ||||
1825 | La Scala, Milan | 30 | 8 | 6 | 10 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | |||
1858 | La Scala, Milan | Verdi: Un ballo in maschera | 28 | 8 | 8 | 8 | 2 + 1 | 2 + 1 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 3 | 3 + 1 | yes | 1 |
1876 | Bayreuther Festspielhaus (opening) | Wagner: Ring | 16+16 | 12 | 12 | 8 | 4 | 3 + 1 | 3 + 1 | 3 + 1 | 8 | 4 | 4 + 5 | yes | 4 |
1909 | Dresden Oper | Strauss: Elektra | 8 + 8 + 8 | 6 + 6 + 6 | 6 + 6 | 8 | 3 + 1 | 3 + 1 | 5 + 3 | 3 + 1 | 8 | 6 + 1 | 2 + 3 | yes | 2 |
By Composer/Period | ||||
Composer | Nationality | Century | Performances | Productions |
Verdi | Italian | 19th | 27,194 | 5911 |
Puccini | Italian | 19–20th | 20,297 | 3805 |
Mozart | Austrian | 18th | 19,860 | 4207 |
Rossini | Italian | 19th | 8674 | 1898 |
Donizetti | Italian | 19th | 7716 | 1756 |
Wagner | German | 19th | 7229 | 1866 |
Bizet | French | 19th | 6517 | 1303 |
Tchaikovsky | Russian | 19th | 4314 | 1041 |
R. Strauss | German | 20th | 3970 | 832 |
Haendel | German/English | 17th | 2852 | 504 |
Britten | English | 20th | 2368 | 513 |
… | ||||
Janacek | Czech | 19–20th | 2071 | 423 |
… | ||||
Gluck | German | 18th | 1435 | 298 |
… | ||||
Purcell | English | 17th | 1102 | 280 |
… | ||||
Monteverdi | Italian | 16–17th | 981 | 250 |
By Opera/language | ||||
Composer | Title | Language | Performances | Productions |
Verdi | La traviata | Italian | 6843 | 1373 |
Mozart | Die Zauberflöte | German (Singspiel) | 5839 | 900 |
Bizet | Carmen | French | 5728 | 1110 |
Puccini | La boheme | Italian | 5316 | 1005 |
Puccini | Tosca | Italian | 4611 | 989 |
Rossini | Il barbiere di Siviglia | Italian | 4236 | 918 |
Puccini | Madama Butterfly | Italian | 4230 | 929 |
Mozart | Le nozze di Figaro | Italian | 4143 | 815 |
Verdi | Rigoletto | Italian | 3952 | 866 |
Mozart | Don Giovanni | Italian | 3949 | 755 |
… | ||||
Wagner | Der fliegende Holländer | German | 1593 | 332 |
… | ||||
Mozart | Die Entführung aus dem Serail | German | 1413 | 269 |
… | ||||
Dvorak | Rusalka | Czech | 1133 | 193 |
… | ||||
Tchaikovsky | Pikovaya Dama | Russian | 816 | 209 |
Ref. | Year | Type | Location | Music Materials | Multi-Tracks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[196] | 1969 | ensemble | BBC | Wagner: Siegfried Idyll | no |
[197] | 1988 | ensemble | Osaka | Mozart, Le Nozze De Figaro (Ouverture) Glinka: Ruslan And Lyudmila (Ouverture) Verdi: La Traviata (Preludio) | no |
[198] | 1998 | solo | Parma | Haendel: “Lascia Ch’io Pianga” from Almira Tosti: “Ricordi ancora il di’ che c’incontrammo” Mozart: “In uomini, in soldati” from Cosi’ Fan Tutte | yes |
[199] | 2008 | solo | Aalto | Mozart: “Mi tradí quell’alma ingrata” from Don Giovanni | yes |
[5,125,200] | 2015–2019 | solo | TU-Berlin | Speech from Sofocle’s Edipo tiranno Speech from Cicero’s Catiline Oration | (yes) |
[201,202] | 2016–2020 | solo | Bologna | Donizetti: “O mio Paride vezzoso” from L’elisir d’amore Verdi: “Di tale amor che dirsi” from Il trovatore Puccini: “O mio babbino caro” from Gianni Schicchi | yes |
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D’Orazio, D. Italian-Style Opera Houses: A Historical Review. Appl. Sci. 2020, 10, 4613. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10134613
D’Orazio D. Italian-Style Opera Houses: A Historical Review. Applied Sciences. 2020; 10(13):4613. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10134613
Chicago/Turabian StyleD’Orazio, Dario. 2020. "Italian-Style Opera Houses: A Historical Review" Applied Sciences 10, no. 13: 4613. https://doi.org/10.3390/app10134613