[Milton-L] Haydn's Creation and castrati

srevard at siue.edu srevard at siue.edu
Fri May 22 14:53:30 EDT 2009


Although a number of heroic males were sung by castrati, Samson was written
for a tenor.  Those lucky enough to have heard Jon Vickers sing it know
how impressive the tenor voice was in that role.  Some of the males
in oratorios were actually written for mezzo-sopranos rather than castrati.
See my article on PL as opera and oratorio in Milton and the Arts,
which also includes a discussion of Haydn's Creation.

Stella Revard

Quoting Nancy Charlton <charltonwordorder1 at gmail.com>:

> Hannibal Hamlin wrote:
>
> It's also worth remembering that the heroic roles (Julius Caesar, Samson,
> etc.) in baroque opera were generally sung by men -- castratos -- who, given
> the hormonal results of surgery, were like nothing living today. Imagine
> perhaps a counter-tenor the size of a football player with the vocal power
> of Jessye Norman.
>
> Some time ago I had the privilege of hearing a scratchy recording of the
> last castrato, made about 80 years ago. I don't recall his name, but he was
> primarily a cantor, a singer of liturgical music at the Vatican. His singing
> sounded as if an oboe reed had been substituted for his larynx. I decided
> I'd prefer the fictional voice that was synthesized in the film "Farinelli,"
> but that well behind  accomplished, virile countertenors the likes of
> Andreas Scholl OR powerful mezzos such as Dame Janet Baker, Marilyn Horne,
> or Stephanie Blake (who sang Gluck's "Orfeo" in February shown in Met
> broadcasts to theaters.)  Dame Janet's final performance was a "Julius
> Caesar" in English, Sir Charles Mackerras conducting; I was bowled over by
> and video of it about 15 years ago, and it's among awesome performances I
> can count on one hand. I also heard/saw Ms Horne as Tancred, but it was not
> as sublime as the JC.
>
> In a time when the popular press is trumpeting the demise of classical
> music, it is singular that there is a revival of interest in Handel
> opera--and an abundance of singers capable of singing it. This includes the
> rise of several world-class countertenors, whereas for years Sir Peter Pears
> was the only one, and he best known for singing the music written for him by
> Benjamin Britten. And then there was Barbra Streisand, later the Celtic
> Women, making a popular song out of "Lascia ch'io piangia."
>
> To bring this back to Milton, has there been any study of his Italian poems?
> For that matter, of his use of Tasso and Ariosto as well as Dante?
>
> Nancy Charlton
>



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