Giove in Argo

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Operas by George Frideric Handel

Almira (1705)
Florindo (1708)
Rodrigo (1707)
Agrippina (1709)
Rinaldo (1711)
Il pastor fido (1712)
Teseo (1713)
Amadigi di Gaula (1715)
Acis and Galatea (1718)
Radamisto (1720)
Muzio Scevola (1721)
Floridante (1721)
Ottone (1723)
Flavio (1723)
Giulio Cesare (1724)
Tamerlano (1724)
Rodelinda (1725)
Scipione (1726)
Alessandro (1726)
Admeto (1727)
Riccardo Primo (1727)
Siroe (1728)
Tolomeo (1728)
Lotario (1729)
Partenope (1730)
Poro (1731)
Ezio (1732)
Sosarme (1732)
Orlando (1733)
Arianna in Creta (1734)
Oreste (1734)
Ariodante (1735)
Alcina (1735)
Atalanta (1736)
Arminio (1737)
Giustino (1737)
Berenice (1737)
Alessandro Severo (1738)
Faramondo (1738)
Serse (1738)
Giove in Argo (1739)
Imeneo (1740)
Deidamia (1741)
Semele (1744)

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Giove in Argo (or Jupiter in Argos) (HWV A14) is an Italian opera by George Frideric Handel. The libretto was written by Antonio Maria Lucchini.

It was first performed in King's Theatre, Haymarket, London on May 1, 1739.

Contents

[edit] History

The libretto by the Venetian poet Lucchini had been written for a setting by Antonio Lotti in Dresden 1717. Handel might have heard Lotti's opera on his visit to Dresden in 1719, where the famous Senesino sung the part of Jupiter. Probably Handel took a copy of the text to England and remembered it in 1739 when he was looking for a libretto for a short pasticcio opera with three female characters in it.

Handel has brought to London stage several pasticci. In most cases he adapted successful works of Italian composers for London, but he has written three pasticci, in which he re-uses music from his own earlier works. They are the well known Oreste, the hardly known Alessandro Severo and the completely unknown Giove in Argo. In the latter opera he uses apart from music from his earlier works some original compositions as well as two arias (sung by Iside) of the Italian composer Francesco Araia.

The opera failed in London and was abandoned after only two performances.

[edit] Modern performances

The opera has been performed for the first time in modern period on 15th September 2006 in Bayreuth (Germany) in the 18th century Margrave's Opera House in a complete and staged production by Concert Royal, Cologne and Collegium Cantorum Cologne, directed by Igor Folwill and conducted Thomas Gebhardt. There is no published edition of the music available yet. An edition is announced to be due soon by the Complete Works Edition, edited by John Roberts (HHA).

[edit] Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, May 1, 1739
(Conductor: - )
Aretes, a shepherd, later discovered as Jupiter bass Gustavus Waltz
Isis, daughter of Inachus, betrothed to the King of Egypt, Osiris
Erastus, a shepherd, later discovered as Osiris, King of Egypt
Diana
Calisto, daughter of Lycaon
Lycaon, disguised as a shepherd, tyrant of Arcadia
Chorus of huntsmen, shepherds and nymphs

[edit] Selected recordings

The work is due to be recorded in late 2007 by Il Complesso Barocco under the direction of Alan Curtis.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

  • [1] Bayreuther Barock - First modern performance of Giove in Argo in Bayreuth (Germany)