Please note: This concert is in the past and has already taken place.

Lo Spedale: Dramma Burlesco

The Hospital: 17th Century Comedy in Music

Add to my Calendar 27-11-2019 19:30 27-11-2019 21:30 36 Lo Spedale: Dramma Burlesco Four patients wait for a doctor that seems to have forgotten them. The parallels with our own time are surprising. Such is the poet Antonio Abati's satire of healthcare, medicine and hypochondria, which has lost none of its wit and charm in the 350 years since it was written.First performed as part of the Illuminate Rotherhithe Festival in November 2018, this is its second-ever staging in modern times, and the first in a faithful 17th Century production. Rediscovered by Dr Naomi Matsumoto (Goldsmiths University), the composer is at present unknown, though the libretto for Lo Spedale was most likely written by Abati during his time at the Imperial court in Vienna in the 1640s. The music is as eccentric as the text, with moments of great beauty juxtaposed with comic choruses, and some incredibly complex rhythmic writing that suggests it may have been the work of Giovanni Valentini, court composer and friend of Abati, much of whose work is now lost. Work on identifying the composer's identity for certain has taken place alongside preparing the performance, and a programme essay on the work, along with a new translation of the libretto by Oliver Doyle and Delia Fiordilino, will be avaliable for purchase on the door. The work will be sung in Italian with English surtitles, and lasts approximately 1 hour. Holy Trinity Church, London DD/MM/YYYY

Details

Holy Trinity Church
Bryan Road
Rotherhithe

London
SE16 5HF
England


Programme

AnonymousLo Spedale (17th Century Dramma Burlesco)

Performers

Jessica Eucker – soprano
Oliver Doyle – Tenor
Tristram Cooke – countertenor
Matthew O'Keeffe – baritone
Kirsty Anderson – soprano
Joachim Sabbat – Bass
Peter Martin – theorbo
Richard Mackenzie – archlute / baroque guitar
Kate Conway – viola da gamba

Musica Antica Rotherhithe

Programme Note

Four patients wait for a doctor that seems to have forgotten them. The parallels with our own time are surprising. Such is the poet Antonio Abati's satire of healthcare, medicine and hypochondria, which has lost none of its wit and charm in the 350 years since it was written.

First performed as part of the Illuminate Rotherhithe Festival in November 2018, this is its second-ever staging in modern times, and the first in a faithful 17th Century production. Rediscovered by Dr Naomi Matsumoto (Goldsmiths University), the composer is at present unknown, though the libretto for Lo Spedale was most likely written by Abati during his time at the Imperial court in Vienna in the 1640s. The music is as eccentric as the text, with moments of great beauty juxtaposed with comic choruses, and some incredibly complex rhythmic writing that suggests it may have been the work of Giovanni Valentini, court composer and friend of Abati, much of whose work is now lost. Work on identifying the composer's identity for certain has taken place alongside preparing the performance, and a programme essay on the work, along with a new translation of the libretto by Oliver Doyle and Delia Fiordilino, will be avaliable for purchase on the door.

The work will be sung in Italian with English surtitles, and lasts approximately 1 hour.

C. Annika Derksen

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