Transcript castratti

“Castratti”
No, it isn’t an Italian Pastry!
BAM
!
Figaro, Figaro,
Figaro…
THE BAROQUE ERA
• NEOPOLITAN OPERA - 17th Century
Okay, so it is Italian, but it’s definitely not
about pastry. “Castratti” What does the
beginning of word sound like? CASTRATI…
BAM!
You guessed it…
OUCH!
Male sopranos, or castratti, were the
"superstars" of opera
•
For best results, a boy was normally operated on at
around six to seven years and not older.
• The castrati were born, as a general rule, of
humble parents; for only those in fairly pressing
need of money would have consented to the
mutilation of their children.
• The doctors most esteemed for the operation
were those of Bologna: they were in demand for
the express purpose of castrating boys
• Clement VIII eventually authorized castration only ad
glorium Dei, "for the Glory of God"
The voices that resulted soared to a
stratospherically high range with a
quality somewhat similar to the voice
of an innocent choirboy
Performance = $$$
• They performed in the theater at a time when
women were not permitted to do so.
• As demand increased, so too did the salaries that a
castrato could charge for his services. Contemporaries
were shocked at the rapid rise in the salaries of castrati. In
1739, for example, Cafferelli, one of the most famous of the
castrati, was paid 2,263 ducats for the opera season, while
the composer of the opera, Nicola Porpora, was paid a
mere 200 ducats
Baroque Rock Stars
• For their part, the great castrati
behaved very much like the rock
stars of today, complete with
individual moods and quirks that
could easily reduce a hassled
impresario to exasperation.
The Voice
• It was the castrato's voice that sent audiences into
raptures and made the tantrums and strange
behavior tolerable.
• The castrati had the high beautiful voices of women,
and the strong powerful lungs and chest muscles of
men.
• Composers began to write music that could
demonstrate these singers remarkable abilities.
The End of an Era
• The triumph of the castrati was relatively short-lived.
• French philosophers, among them Voltaire and
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, saw the practice of
castration as an "offence against nature",
unbecoming in a supposedly modern and
enlightened society.
Giovanni Battista Velluti was reported to be the last known Castrati
opera singer. His story is somewhat different from the other Castrati.
He was meant to become a military officer by his parents, however,
some ailment in childhood required a minor surgery. The doctor
misunderstood what the parents were asking and castrated the child.
He was not known to be the best singer, his training coming at the
very end of the era. He was however, known to be one of the most
handsome of the Castrati. His boyish looks lasted most of his life and
his normal height and proportions made him more acceptable in
Giovanni
Battista
Velluti
public at the time.
The End
• I mean…it really is…it’s against the law now.
So guys, if you want to sing really, really,
ridiculously high…
Maybe Michael’s giving lessons.