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Bladmuziek $48.86

Oorspronkelijk

Giuseppe Verdi. Macbeth - Vocal Score. Sheet Music. Voice. Piano Accompaniment. VCE. PFA. Giuseppe Verdi.

Vertaling

Giuseppe Verdi. Macbeth - Vocal Score. Bladmuziek. Stem. Pianobegeleiding. VCE. PFA. Giuseppe Verdi.

Oorspronkelijk

Verdi 's tenth Opera, Macbeth , had its premiere at the Teatro alla Pergola in Florence on 14 March 1847. That the composer himself had a high opinion of the work is confirmed both by his correspondence and by his dedication of the vocal score to his father-in-law, Antonio Barezzi. Seventeen years later, long after Macbeth had firmly established itself in the repertoiry of Italian and foreign theatres, Verdi agreed to revise the Opera for its first Paris production, at the Theatre-Lyrique on 21 April 1865. The revisions were far more extensive than he had initially anticipated, but the self-criticism he brought to the process indicated his continuing belief in the viability of the Opera. The Paris premiere of the revised version was not a success, and even after the publication of a vocal score of the 1865 Opera, many Italian theatres continued to perform the original version. Nevertheless, since Verdi considered the revisions definitive, Ricordi chose to market the 1865 version, which has thereafter always remained in the catalogue.

Vertaling

Verdi 's tenth Opera, Macbeth , had its premiere at the Teatro alla Pergola in Florence on 14 March 1847. That the composer himself had a high opinion of the work is confirmed both by his correspondence and by his dedication of the vocal score to his father-in-law, Antonio Barezzi. Seventeen years later, long after Macbeth had firmly established itself in the repertoiry of Italian and foreign theatres, Verdi agreed to revise the Opera for its first Paris production, at the Theatre-Lyrique on 21 April 1865. The revisions were far more extensive than he had initially anticipated, but the self-criticism he brought to the process indicated his continuing belief in the viability of the Opera. The Paris premiere of the revised version was not a success, and even after the publication of a vocal score of the 1865 Opera, many Italian theatres continued to perform the original version. Nevertheless, since Verdi considered the revisions definitive, Ricordi chose to market the 1865 version, which has thereafter always remained in the catalogue.