Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Musical Examples
- Editor's Note
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter One The Scene and the Players
- Chapter Two The Young Musician
- Chapter Three Early Works
- Chapter Four The Musical Dramatist
- Chapter Five Italian Psalms
- Chapter Six Padre Martini and the Dixit Dominus
- Chapter Seven Family Honors and Private Music Making
- Chapter Eight Isacco Figura del Redentore and the Death of Metastasio
- Chapter Nine “Countless Artistic Pleasures” Martines as Musical Hostess and Teacher
- Appendix One The Martines Family
- Appendix Two Letters to and from Marianna Martines
- Appendix Three Metastasio's Will and Codicil
- Appendix Four List of Works
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter Four - The Musical Dramatist
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Musical Examples
- Editor's Note
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter One The Scene and the Players
- Chapter Two The Young Musician
- Chapter Three Early Works
- Chapter Four The Musical Dramatist
- Chapter Five Italian Psalms
- Chapter Six Padre Martini and the Dixit Dominus
- Chapter Seven Family Honors and Private Music Making
- Chapter Eight Isacco Figura del Redentore and the Death of Metastasio
- Chapter Nine “Countless Artistic Pleasures” Martines as Musical Hostess and Teacher
- Appendix One The Martines Family
- Appendix Two Letters to and from Marianna Martines
- Appendix Three Metastasio's Will and Codicil
- Appendix Four List of Works
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
To a composer of Marianna's talents who honed her skills, as she tells us in her autobiographical statement, by studying the scores of the greatest operatic composers of the age, and whose arias were likened by one of her contemporaries to Jommelli’s, opera must have beckoned. Yet this was a genre restricted largely to professional composers, which meant, of course, to men. She wrote no operas, but she left in her two surviving oratorios a vivid sense of her skills as a dramatic composer. And she left in her settings of Italian aria texts a hint of what might have resulted if Vienna's operatic stages had been open to her.
Italian Arias
Charles Burney, even before he met Martines, was eager to do so because he hoped that in her vocal compositions and performance he would hear an authentic expression of Metastasio's aesthetic principles:
I was extremely curious to know what kind of music would best fulfil the ideas of Metastasio, when applied to his own poetry; and imagined that this young lady, with all the advantages of his instructions, counsel, and approbation combined with her own genius, must be an alter idem, and that her productions would include every musical embellishment which could be superadded to his poetry, without destroying or diminishing its native beauty.
Burney was not disappointed, writing of Marianna's settings of Metastasio's ariatexts, when he finally heard them: “The airs were very well written, in a modern style; but neither common, nor unnaturally new. The words were well set, the melody was simple, and great room was left for expression and embellishment; but her voice and manner of singing, both delighted and astonished me!”
His judgment of the arias (both as compositions and as opportunities for vocal display and improvisation) applies well to the collection of twenty-four arias preserved in a manuscript entitled Scelta d’arie composte per suo diletto da Marianna Martines. Marianna assembled this collection in 1767, at the age of twentythree, in a pair of elegantly copied volumes now preserved in the library of the Conservatorio San Pietro a Majella in Naples.
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- Marianna MartinesA Woman Composer in the Vienna of Mozart and Haydn, pp. 58 - 78Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010