Pietro Antonio Domenico Trapassi (3 January 1698 – 12 April 1782), better known by his pseudonym of Pietro Metastasio (), was an Italian poet and
librettist, considered the most important writer of ''
opera seria
''Opera seria'' (; plural: ''opere serie''; usually called '' dramma per musica'' or '' melodramma serio'') is an Italian musical term which refers to the noble and "serious" style of Italian opera that predominated in Europe from the 1710s to a ...
'' libretti.
Early life
Metastasio was born in Rome, where his father, Felice Trapassi, a native of
Assisi
Assisi (, also , ; from la, Asisium) is a town and ''comune'' of Italy in the Province of Perugia in the Umbria region, on the western flank of Monte Subasio.
It is generally regarded as the birthplace of the Latin poet Propertius, born around ...
, had taken service in the Corsican regiment of the papal forces. Felice married a Bolognese woman, Francesca Galasti, and became a grocer in the ''Via dei Cappellari''. The couple had two sons and two daughters; Pietro was the younger son.
Pietro, while still a child, is said to have attracted crowds by reciting impromptu verses on a given subject. On one such occasion in 1709, two men of distinction stopped to listen:
Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina
Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina (20 January 1664 – 6 January 1718) was an Italian man of letters and jurist. He was born at Roggiano Gravina, a small town near Cosenza, in Calabria.
Biography
Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina was descended from a di ...
, famous for legal and literary erudition as well as his directorship of the
Arcadian Academy, and Lorenzini, a critic of some note. Gravina was attracted by the boy's poetic talent and personal charm, and made Pietro his ''protégé''; in the course of a few weeks he adopted him. Felice Trapassi was glad to give his son the chance of a good education and introduction into society.
Gravina hellenized the boy's name Trapassi into Metastasio, and intended his adopted son to be a jurist like himself. He therefore made the boy learn
Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through the power ...
and law. At the same time he cultivated his literary gifts, and displayed the youthful prodigy both at his own house and in the Roman coteries. Metastasio soon found himself competing with the most celebrated ''improvvisatori'' of his time in Italy. However, his days full of study and evenings devoted to improvising poetry took a toll on Pietro's health.
Gravina, making a business trip to
Calabria, exhibited Metastasio in the literary circles of
Naples
Naples (; it, Napoli ; nap, Napule ), from grc, Νεάπολις, Neápolis, lit=new city. is the regional capital of Campania and the third-largest city of Italy, after Rome and Milan, with a population of 909,048 within the city's adminis ...
, then placed him in the care of his kinsman Gregorio Caroprese at Scaléa. In country air and the quiet of the southern seashore Metastasio's health revived. Gravina decided that he should never improvise again, but should be reserved for nobler efforts, when, having completed his education, he might enter into competition with the greatest poets.
Metastasio responded to his patron's wishes. At the age of twelve he translated the ''
Iliad
The ''Iliad'' (; grc, Ἰλιάς, Iliás, ; "a poem about Ilium") is one of two major ancient Greek epic poems attributed to Homer. It is one of the oldest extant works of literature still widely read by modern audiences. As with the '' Odys ...
'' into octave stanzas; and two years later he composed a
Senecan tragedy on a subject from
Gian Giorgio Trissino
Gian Giorgio Trissino (8 July 1478 – 8 December 1550), also called Giovan Giorgio Trissino and self-styled as Giovan Giωrgio Trissino, was a Venetian Renaissance humanist, poet, dramatist, diplomat, grammarian, linguist, and philosopher. ...
's ''Italia liberata'' – Gravina's favourite epic. It was called ''Giustino'', and was printed in 1713; forty-two years later, Metastasio told his publisher that he would willingly suppress this
juvenilia
Juvenilia are literary, musical or artistic works produced by authors during their youth. Written juvenilia, if published at all, usually appears as a retrospective publication, some time after the author has become well known for later works.
...
.
Caroprese died in 1714, leaving Gravina his heir; and in 1718 Gravina also died. Metastasio inherited a fortune of 15,000 scudi. At a meeting of the Arcadian Academy, he recited an elegy to his patron, and then settled down to enjoy his wealth.
Roman fame
Metastasio was now twenty. During the last four years he had worn the costume of abbé, having taken the minor orders without which it was then useless to expect advancement in Rome. His romantic history, personal beauty, charming manners and distinguished talents made him fashionable. Within two years he had spent his money and increased his reputation. He decided to apply himself seriously to the work of his profession. He migrated to Naples, and entered the office of an eminent lawyer named Castagnola, who exercised severe control over his time and energies.
While slaving at the law, Metastasio in 1721 composed an
epithalamium, and probably also his first musical serenade, ''Endimione'' (
Endymion), on the occasion of the marriage of his patroness Donna Anna Francesca Ravaschieri Pinelli di Sangro (later 6th Principessa di Belmonte) to the Marchese Don Antonio Pignatelli (later His Serene Highness
Prince of Belmonte
Prince of Belmonte ( it, Principe di Belmonte; es, Príncipe de Belmonte) is a noble title created in 1619 by the Spanish crown for the Barons of Badolato and Belmonte. The name of the title is taken from the fortress town of Belmonte in Calabria ...
). In 1722, while Naples was under
Austrian rule, the birthday of
Empress Elisabeth Christine had to be celebrated with more than ordinary honours, and the viceroy asked Metastasio to compose a serenata for the occasion. Metastasio accepted, but kept his authorship secret. He wrote "Gli orti esperidi", which was set to music by
Nicola Porpora
Nicola (or Niccolò) Antonio Porpora (17 August 16863 March 1768) was an Italian composer and teacher of singing of the Baroque era, whose most famous singing students were the castrati Farinelli and Caffarelli. Other students included composers ...
, and sung by Porpora's pupil, the
castrato
A castrato (Italian, plural: ''castrati'') is a type of classical male singing voice equivalent to that of a soprano, mezzo-soprano, or contralto. The voice is produced by castration of the singer before puberty, or it occurs in one who, due ...
Farinelli
Farinelli (; 24 January 1705 – 16 September 1782) was the stage name of Carlo Maria Michelangelo Nicola Broschi (), a celebrated Italian castrato singer of the 18th century and one of the greatest singers in the history of opera. Farinelli ...
, making a spectacular début, it won the most enthusiastic applause. The Roman prima donna,
Marianna Bulgarelli, who played Venus in this opera, spared no pains until she had discovered its author.
Bulgarelli persuaded the poet to give up the law, and promised to secure for him fame and independence if he would devote his talents to the musical drama. In her house Metastasio became acquainted with the greatest composers of the day:
Johann Adolph Hasse
Johann Adolph Hasse (baptised 25 March 1699 – 16 December 1783) was an 18th-century German composer, singer and teacher of music. Immensely popular in his time, Hasse was best known for his prolific operatic output, though he also composed a co ...
,
Giovanni Battista Pergolesi,
Alessandro Scarlatti,
Leonardo Vinci
Leonardo Vinci (1690 – 27 May 1730) was an Italian composer known chiefly for his 40 or so operas; comparatively little of his work in other genres survives. A central proponent of the Neapolitan School of opera, his influence on subsequ ...
,
Leonardo Leo
Leonardo Leo (5 August 1694 – 31 October 1744), more correctly Leonardo Ortensio Salvatore de Leo, was a Baroque composer.
Biography
Leo was born in San Vito degli Schiavoni (currently known as San Vito dei Normanni, province of Brindisi) ...
,
Francesco Durante, and
Benedetto Marcello, all of whom would later set his plays to melody. Here too he studied the art of singing, and learned to appreciate the style of such men as Farinelli. Metastasio wrote quickly and his plays were enhanced by being set to music and sung by the greatest singers of the day..
Metastasio lived with Bulgarelli and her husband in Rome. Moved by an affection half maternal, half romantic, and by admiration for his talent, she adopted him more passionately even than Gravina had done. She took the whole Trapassi family – father, mother, brother, sisters – into her own house. She fostered the poet's genius and pampered his caprices. Under her influence he wrote in rapid succession ''
Didone abbandonata
''Didone abbandonata'' is an opera libretto in three acts by Pietro Metastasio. It was his first original work and was set to music by Domenico Sarro in 1724. The opera was accompanied by the intermezzo ''L'impresario delle Isole Canarie'', also b ...
'', ''Catone in Utica'', ''Ezio'', ''Alessandro nell' Indie'', ''
Semiramide riconosciuta
''Semiramide riconosciuta'' (''Semiramis recognized'' or ''revealed'') is an opera libretto by Pietro Metastasio (1698–1782), written in 1729. It is for ''opera seria'', and accordingly consists of recitatives and ''da capo'' arias. It tell ...
'', ''Siroe'' and ''
Artaserse''. These dramas were set to music by the chief composers of the day, and performed in the chief towns of Italy.
But meanwhile Bulgarelli was growing older; she had ceased to sing in public; and the poet increasingly felt his dependence upon her kindness irksome. He gained 300 scudi for each opera; this pay, though good, was precarious and he longed for some fixed engagement. In September 1729 he received the offer of the post of court poet to the theatre at
Vienna
en, Viennese
, iso_code = AT-9
, registration_plate = W
, postal_code_type = Postal code
, postal_code =
, timezone = CET
, utc_offset = +1
, timezone_DST ...
, succeeding
Pietro Pariati, with a stipend of 3000 florins. This he at once accepted. Bulgarelli unselfishly sped him on his way to glory. She took charge of his family in Rome and he set off for
Austria
Austria, , bar, Östareich officially the Republic of Austria, is a country in the southern part of Central Europe, lying in the Eastern Alps. It is a federation of nine states, one of which is the capital, Vienna, the most populous ...
.
Vienna
In the early summer of 1730, Metastasio settled at Vienna in an apartment in the so-called 'Michaelerhaus'. This date marks a new period in his artistic activity. Between the years 1730 and 1740 his finest dramas, ''Adriano in Siria'', ''Demetrio'', ''Issipile'', ''
Demofoonte'', ''
Olimpiade'', ''Clemenza di Tito'', ''Achille in Sciro'', ''Temistocle'' and ''Attilio Regolo'', were produced for the imperial theatre. Some of them had to be composed for special occasions, with almost incredible rapidity: ''Achille'' in eighteen days, ''Ipermestra'' in nine. Poet, composer, musical copyist and singer did their work together in frantic haste. Metastasio understood the technique of his peculiar art in its minutest details. The experience gained at Naples and Rome, quickened by the excitement of his new career at Vienna, enabled him almost instinctively, and as it were by inspiration, to hit the exact mark aimed at in the opera.
The libretto ''
Adriano in Siria'' was used by more than 60 other composers in the 18th and early 19th century:
Antonio Caldara
Antonio Caldara (ca 1670 – 28 December 1736) was an Italian Baroque composer.
Life
Caldara was born in Venice (exact date unknown), the son of a violinist. He became a chorister at St Mark's in Venice, where he learned several instruments, ...
(1732),
Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1734),
Francesco Maria Veracini
Francesco Maria Veracini (1 February 1690 – 31 October 1768) was an Italian composer and violinist, perhaps best known for his sets of violin sonatas. As a composer, according to Manfred Bukofzer, "His individual, if not subjective, style has ...
(1735),
Baldassare Galuppi
Baldassare Galuppi (18 October 17063 January 1785) was an Italian composer, born on the island of Burano in the Venetian Republic. He belonged to a generation of composers, including Johann Adolph Hasse, Giovanni Battista Sammartini, and C.&nb ...
(1740),
Carl Heinrich Graun
Carl Heinrich Graun (7 May 1704 – 8 August 1759) was a German composer and tenor. Along with Johann Adolph Hasse, he is considered to be the most important German composer of Italian opera of his time.
Biography
Graun was born in Wahrenbrü ...
(1746),
Johann Adolph Hasse
Johann Adolph Hasse (baptised 25 March 1699 – 16 December 1783) was an 18th-century German composer, singer and teacher of music. Immensely popular in his time, Hasse was best known for his prolific operatic output, though he also composed a co ...
(1752),
Johann Christian Bach
Johann Christian Bach (September 5, 1735 – January 1, 1782) was a German composer of the Classical era, the eighteenth child of Johann Sebastian Bach, and the youngest of his eleven sons. After living in Italy for several years, Bach mov ...
(1765),
Luigi Cherubini
Luigi Cherubini ( ; ; 8 or 14 SeptemberWillis, in Sadie (Ed.), p. 833 1760 – 15 March 1842) was an Italian Classical and Romantic composer. His most significant compositions are operas and sacred music. Beethoven regarded Cherubini as the grea ...
(1782) and in
Adriano in Siria (Mysliveček)
''Adriano in Siria'' ("Hadrian in Syria") is an 18th-century Italian opera seria in 3 acts by the Czech composer Josef Mysliveček. It was composed to a libretto of the same name by the Italian poet Metastasio that was first performed in 1732 w ...
from (1776).
In Vienna Metastasio met with no marked social success. His plebeian birth excluded him from aristocratic circles. To make up in some measure for this comparative failure, he enjoyed the intimacy of the , sister-in-law of his old patroness the Princess Belmonte Pignatelli. She had lost her husband, and had some while occupied the post of chief favourite to the emperor. Metastasio's liaison with her became so close that it was believed they had been privately married.
Bulgarelli tired of his absence, and asked Metastasio to get her an engagement at the court theatre. He was ashamed of her and tired of her, and wrote dissuading her from the projected visit. The tone of his letters alarmed and irritated her. She seems to have set out from Rome, but died suddenly upon the road. All we know is that she left him her fortune after her husband's life interest in it had expired, and that Metastasio, overwhelmed with grief and remorse, immediately renounced the legacy. This disinterested act plunged the Bulgarelli-Metastasio household at Rome into confusion. Bulgarelli's widower married again. Metastasio's brother, Leopoldo Trapassi, and his father and sister, were thrown upon their own resources.
As time advanced, the life which Metastasio led at Vienna, together with the climate, told on his health and spirits. From about the year 1745 onward he wrote little, though the
cantatas which belong to this period, and the canzonetta ''Ecco quel fiero istante'', which he sent to his friend Farinelli, rank among the most popular of his productions. It was clear, as Vernon Lee has phrased it, that "what ailed him was mental and moral
ennui
In conventional usage, boredom, ennui, or tedium is an emotional and occasionally psychological state experienced when an individual is left without anything in particular to do, is listlessness and dissatisfaction arising from a lack of occup ...
". In 1755 the Countess Althann died, and Metastasio's social contacts were reduced to the gatherings round him in the bourgeois house of his friend Nicolo Martinez, the secretary to the papal Nuncio in Vienna. He sank rapidly into the habits of old age; and, though he lived till the year 1782, he was very inactive. He died on 12 April, bequeathing his whole fortune of some 130,000 florins to the six children of
Nicolo Martinez. He had survived all his Italian relatives.
Throughout the forty years of his career in Vienna, in the course of which Metastasio eventually outlived his own originality and creative powers, his fame went on increasing. In his library he counted as many as forty editions of his own works. They had been translated into French, English, German, Spanish, and modern Greek. They had been set to music over and over again by every composer of distinction. They had been sung by the best virtuosi in every capital, and there was not a literary academy of note which had not conferred on him the honour of membership. Strangers of distinction passing through Vienna made a point of paying their respects to the old poet at his lodgings in the Kohlmarkt Gasse.
But his poetry was intended for a certain style of music – for the music of omnipotent vocalists, of exceedingly skilled sopranos and castrati. When the operas of
Christoph Willibald Gluck
Christoph Willibald (Ritter von) Gluck (; 2 July 1714 – 15 November 1787) was a composer of Italian and French opera in the early classical period. Born in the Upper Palatinate and raised in Bohemia, both part of the Holy Roman Empire, he g ...
and
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 17565 December 1791), baptised as Joannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart, was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical period. Despite his short life, his rapid pace of composition r ...
—focusing more on psychology and less on virtuoso singing—came into vogue, a new style of libretto was needed. (Mozart did use an old Metastasio libretto for his renowned opera ''
La clemenza di Tito'', but, it was substantially re-written for the purpose.) The demise of castrato singing meant that Metastasio's operas dropped out of the repertory.
Metastasio's poetry is emotional, lyrical, and romantic. His chief dramatic situations are expressed by lyrics for two or three voices, embodying the several contending passions of the agents brought into conflict by the circumstances of the plot. The total result is not pure literature, but literature fit for musical effect. Language in Metastasio's hands is musical, lucid, and songlike, perhaps due to his experience as an improvisatory poet. He was an admirer of
Torquato Tasso
Torquato Tasso ( , also , ; 11 March 154425 April 1595) was an Italian poet of the 16th century, known for his 1591 poem ''Gerusalemme liberata'' ( Jerusalem Delivered), in which he depicts a highly imaginative version of the combats between ...
,
Giambattista Marino,
Giovanni Battista Guarini
Giovanni Battista Guarini (10 December 1538 – 7 October 1612) was an Italian poet, dramatist, and diplomat.
Life
Guarini was born in Ferrara. On the termination of his studies at the universities of Pisa, Padua and Ferrara, he was appointed pr ...
, and
Ovid
Pūblius Ovidius Nāsō (; 20 March 43 BC – 17/18 AD), known in English as Ovid ( ), was a Roman poet who lived during the reign of Augustus. He was a contemporary of the older Virgil and Horace, with whom he is often ranked as one of the ...
.
Works
Operas
The names of the first composers to set the respective texts to music are indicated next to the title
* ''
Siface, re di Numidia'' (1723) –
Francesco Feo
* ''
Didone abbandonata
''Didone abbandonata'' is an opera libretto in three acts by Pietro Metastasio. It was his first original work and was set to music by Domenico Sarro in 1724. The opera was accompanied by the intermezzo ''L'impresario delle Isole Canarie'', also b ...
''
Complete libretto in Italian
/ref> (1724) – Domenico Sarro
* ''L'impresario delle Isole Canarie
' (The impresario from the Canary Islands), also known as ''L'impresario delle Canarie'' or ''Dorina e Nibbio'', is a satirical opera intermezzo libretto attributed to Metastasio (Pietro Antonio Domenico Trapassi), written in 1724 to be performe ...
'' (1724) – Domenico Sarro
* '' Siroe rè di Persia'' (1726) – Leonardo Vinci
Leonardo Vinci (1690 – 27 May 1730) was an Italian composer known chiefly for his 40 or so operas; comparatively little of his work in other genres survives. A central proponent of the Neapolitan School of opera, his influence on subsequ ...
* '' Catone in Utica'' (1728) – Leonardo Vinci
* '' Ezio'' (1728) – Pietro Auletta
* '' Alessandro nell'Indie'' (1729) – Leonardo Vinci
* ''Semiramide riconosciuta
''Semiramide riconosciuta'' (''Semiramis recognized'' or ''revealed'') is an opera libretto by Pietro Metastasio (1698–1782), written in 1729. It is for ''opera seria'', and accordingly consists of recitatives and ''da capo'' arias. It tell ...
'' (1729) – Leonardo Vinci
* '' Artaserse'' (1730) – Leonardo Vinci
* '' Demetrio'' (1731) – Antonio Caldara
Antonio Caldara (ca 1670 – 28 December 1736) was an Italian Baroque composer.
Life
Caldara was born in Venice (exact date unknown), the son of a violinist. He became a chorister at St Mark's in Venice, where he learned several instruments, ...
* '' Adriano in Siria'' (1732) – Antonio Caldara
* ''Issipile'' (1732) – Francesco Conti
* ''Demofoonte'' (1733) – Antonio Caldara
* '' L'Olimpiade'' (1733) – Antonio Caldara
* '' La clemenza di Tito'' (1734) – Antonio Caldara
* ''Achille in Sciro'' (1736) – Antonio Caldara
* ''Ciro riconosciuto'' (1736) – Antonio Caldara
* ''Temistocle'' (1736) – Antonio Caldara
* ''Zenobia'' (1740) – Luca Antonio Predieri
Luca Antonio Predieri (13 September 1688 – 3 January 1767) was an Italian composer and violinist. A member of a prominent family of musicians, Predieri was born in Bologna and was active there from 1704. In 1737 he moved to Vienna, eventually be ...
* ''Antigono'' (1743) – Johann Adolph Hasse
Johann Adolph Hasse (baptised 25 March 1699 – 16 December 1783) was an 18th-century German composer, singer and teacher of music. Immensely popular in his time, Hasse was best known for his prolific operatic output, though he also composed a co ...
* ''Ipermestra'' (1744) – Johann Adolph Hasse
* ''Attilio Regolo'' (1750) – Johann Adolph Hasse
* ''Il re pastore'' (1751) – Giuseppe Bonno
Giuseppe Bonno (29 January 1711 – 15 April 1788) Michael Lorenz gives his first name as "Joseph" because Emperor Joseph I was his godfather; Lorenz also asserts that Bonno was born on 30 JanuaryHaydn Singing at Vivaldi's Exequies: An Ineradica ...
* ''L'eroe cinese'' (1752) – Giuseppe Bonno
* ''Nitteti'' (1756) – Nicola Conforto
Nicola Conforto (25 September 1718 – 17 March 1793) was an Italian composer.
He studied music in his hometown at the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto (Music conservatories of Naples), under the tutorship of Giovanni Fischetti and Fra ...
* '' Il trionfo di Clelia'' (1762) – Johann Adolph Hasse
* ''Romolo ed Ersilia'' (1765) – Johann Adolph Hasse
* ''Ruggiero Ruggiero () is an Italian language, Italian spelling variant of the name Ruggero, a version of the Germanic languages, Germanic name Roger, and may refer to:
As a surname
*Adamo Ruggiero (born 1986), Canadian actor
*Angela Ruggiero (born 1980), Ame ...
'' (1771) – Johann Adolph Hasse
Other stage works
* ''Giustino'' (1712)
* ''Angelica'' (1720)
* ''Endimione'' (1721)
* ''Gli orti esperdi'' (1721)
* ''La Galatea'' (1722)
* ''La contesa de' numi'' (1729)
* ''Il tempio dell'Eternità'' (1731)
* ''Amor prigioniero'' (1732)
* ''L'asilo d'Amore'' (1732)
* ''Il palladio conservato'' (1735)
* ''Il sogno di Scipione'' (1735)
* ''Le cinesi'' (1735)
* ''Le grazie vendicate'' (1735)
* ''Il Parnaso accusato e difeso'' (1738)
* ''La pace fra la virtù e la bellezza'' (1738)
* ''Astrea placata'' (1739)
* ''Il natale di Giove'' (1740)
* ''Il vero omaggio'' (1743)
* ''Augurio di felicità (1749)
* ''La rispettosa tenerezza'' (1750)
* ''L'isola disabitata'' (1753)
* ''Tributo di rispetto e d'amore'' (1754)
* ''La gara'' (1755)
* ''Il sogno'' (1756)
* ''La ritrosia disarmata'' (1759)
* ''Alcide al bivio'' (1760)
* ''L'Atenaide (Gli affetti generosi)'' (1762)
* ''Egeria'' (1764)
* ''Il Parnaso confuso'' (1765)
* ''Il trionfo d'Amore'' (1765)
* ''La corona'' (1765)
* ''La pace fra le tre dee'' (1765)
* ''Partenope'' (1767)
* ''L'ape'' (n.d.)
Oratorios
* ''Per la festività del santo natale'' (1727)
* '' La passione di Gesù Cristo'' (1730)
* ''Sant'Elena al Calvario'' (1731)
* ''La morte d'Abel'' (1732)
* ''Giuseppe riconosciuto'' (1733)
* '' Betulia liberata'' (1734)
* ''Gioas re di Giuda
''Gioas re di Giuda'' (Joas, king of Judah) is an Italian-language oratorio libretto by Pietro Metastasio written in 1735 for imperial court composer Georg Reutter the younger and later set by at least 25 composers.Howard E. Smither, ''A History o ...
'' (1735)
* ''Isacco figura del Redentore'' (1740)
Cantatas
Canzonettas
* ''A Nice''
* ''Canzonetta''
* ''La libertà''
* ''La partenza "La partenza" is a 1749 canzonetta by Pietro Metastasio (1698-1782). It is among his most famous canzonettas and after being set by the poet himself was set again by many composers including Farinelli, Caffarelli, Giovanni Paisiello, Mozart, Beethov ...
''
* ''La primavera''
* ''L'estate''
* ''Palinodia''
Other works
* 9 complimenti
* 33 strofe per musica
* 32 sonetti
* 4 poemi sacri
* Numerosi testi per arie
References
Notes
Sources
*
* Aluigi, ''Metastasio's Life'', (Assisi, 1783), London: Charles Burney
Charles Burney (7 April 1726 – 12 April 1814) was an English music historian, composer and musician. He was the father of the writers Frances Burney and Sarah Burney, of the explorer James Burney, and of Charles Burney, a classicist ...
, 1796, and others.
*
* Kirkpatrick, David A. (2009), ''The Role of Metastasio's Libretti in the Eighteenth Century: Opera as Propaganda'', VDM Verlag Dr. Müller an
Electronic Theses, Treatises and Dissertations. Paper 2883
Florida State University, 2005.
* Metastasio: His works were published in numerous editions, but his personal favourites were those published under his own supervision by Calzabigi (Paris, 1755, 5 vols.). The posthumous works were printed in Vienna in 1795.
* Neville, Don (1990). ''Frontier Research in Opera and Multimedia Preservation: a Project Involving the Documentation and Full Text Retrieval of the Libretti of Pietro Metastasio''. London (Ontario): Faculty of Music, University of Western Ontario. Without ISBN
* Stendhal
Marie-Henri Beyle (; 23 January 1783 – 23 March 1842), better known by his pen name Stendhal (, ; ), was a 19th-century French writer. Best known for the novels ''Le Rouge et le Noir'' ('' The Red and the Black'', 1830) and ''La Chartreuse de ...
, ''Vie de Haydn, Mozart et Métastase'', 1817.
Further reading
*
*
* Burden, Michael, "Reading Henry Tresham’s theatre curtain: Metastasio’s apotheosis, and the Idea of Opera at London’s Pantheon", in ''Cambridge Opera Journal'', 31/1 (2019), pp. 26-62.
* Robert Torre, "Operatic Twins & Musical Rivals: Two Settings of ''Artaserse'' (1730)", ''Discourses in Music'', vol. 6 no. 1, (Summer 2006).
External links
Drammi of Metastasio
Pietro Metastasio: Drammi per musica
Handbook for Metastasio Research
Pietro Metastasio: Poeta dell'Unità culturale europea
Metastasio's works
text, concordances and frequency list
"Biography: Pietre Metastasio"
''The Every-day Book and Table Book; or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements, Sports, Pastimes, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs, and Events, Each of the Three Hundred and Sixty-Five Days, in Past and Present Times; Forming a Complete History of the Year, Months, and Seasons, and a Perpetual Key to the Almanac, Including Accounts of the Weather, Rules for Health and Conduct, Remarkable and Important Anecdotes, Facts, and Notices, in Chronology, Antiquities, Topography, Biography, Natural History, Art, Science, and General Literature; Derived from the Most Authentic Sources, and Valuable Original Communication, with Poetical Elucidations, for Daily Use and Diversion. Vol III.'', ed. William Hone, (London: 1838) pp. 421–24.
*
*
*
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Metastasio, Pietro
1698 births
1782 deaths
18th-century Italian poets
Italian male poets
Writers from Rome
Italian opera librettists
Members of the Academy of Arcadians
Italian expatriates in Austria
Italian male dramatists and playwrights
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's librettists
18th-century Italian dramatists and playwrights
18th-century Italian male writers