Concertos ‘upon the stage’ in Early Hanoverian London: the instrumental counterpart to opera seria
Book chapter
Rawson, R. 2017. Concertos ‘upon the stage’ in Early Hanoverian London: the instrumental counterpart to opera seria. in: DeSimone, A.C. and Gardner, M. (ed.) Music and the Benefit Performance in Eighteenth Century Britain Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
Authors | Rawson, R. |
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Editors | DeSimone, A.C. and Gardner, M. |
Abstract | This chapter argues that the (then) relatively new genre of the concerto fulfilled a role on the London stage that was not found elsewhere in Europe; that is, that because of the competitive culture of benefit concerts, instrumental performers were pressed to devise performance and promotional device to compete with the raft of newly-imported Italian opera stars. The response from instrumental soloists was to imitate the most highly-esteemed singers, not only in terms of their repertoire and style, but also in assuming their physical place 'upon the stage'—a performance environment normally reserved for opera stars. |
Year | 2017 |
Book title | Music and the Benefit Performance in Eighteenth Century Britain |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Output status | Published |
Place of publication | Cambridge |
ISBN | 9781108631808 |
9781108492935 | |
Publication dates | |
2020 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 12 Jan 2018 |
Accepted | 30 Sep 2017 |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/887w7/concertos-upon-the-stage-in-early-hanoverian-london-the-instrumental-counterpart-to-opera-seria
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