Shared Histories of Italian Opera in the Nordic Countries:
Migration, Cultural Transfer and Urban Spaces (18th-19th Centuries)
Workshop 3: Northern Routes and the Italian Diaspora of Musicians
Trondheim, November24-25, 2017
Location: Ringve Music Museum
PROGRAM
Day 1:
9.30-10.00: Welcome and coffee
10.00-12.00: Northern Routes
Jens Hesselager & Christine Jeanneret: Introduction
Keynote address by Reinhard Strohm (Oxford University): Historical Research on Italian Opera North of the Alps
Discussion
12-13:30 Lunch
13:30-15:00: Conference presentations:
Nicola Usula (University of Bologna and Vienna): “Il Cadmo” by Girolamo Pignani (Copenhagen 1663): The Arrival of Italian Opera in Denmark
Tatiana Korneeva (Freie Universität Berlin): Making Opera–Making Empire: Metastasio’s “La Clemenza di Tito” in the Italian-Russian Cultural Transfer
15:00-15:15: Coffee break
15:15-17:00: Presentation and Round table
Jens Hesselager (University of Copenhagen): “…Pour ce qui regarde la manière du chant.” Giuseppe Siboni and Italian Opera in Denmark around 1820
Round table and general discussion:
Perspectives, theoretical approach and geographical framing, overarching themes
19:00: Dinner
Day 2:
9.30-10.00: Coffee
10:00-12:00: Mark Tatlow, Eline Soelmark (soprano) and Valdemar Villadsen (high tenor), Christine Jeanneret, Jens Hesselager
During the second day in the morning, Mark Tatlow and two singers will performed excerpts from Sarti’s Didone abbandonata and Tronfølgen i Sidon (an adaptation of Il Re pastore in Danish). Christine Jeanneret will present the Tronfølgenfejde (Quarrel of Tronfølgen) and the Rosenstand-Goiske controversy as a backdrop.Valdemar will, furthermore, perform Don Ottavio’s ‘Il mio tesoro’ from Don Giovanni, in a Danish version (‘Taarer for dig skal rinde’) using the ornaments and changes that were entered into the Copenhagen performance material by Giuseppe Siboni in the early 1820s. This performance will open a discussion on a practiced-based research:
How do singers feel, act, and sing differently in Danish and in Italian?
•What do the scores tell us about adaptability, skills, ornamentation, language, and music?
•What are the musical implications of translation as a process of de-contextualization and re-contextualization?
12:00-13:30: Lunch
13:30-15:15: Conference Presentations: Routes and Performers
Ellen Gjervan (Dronning Mauds Minne Høgskole, Trondheim):Petoletti in Christiania (1801): Routes, Groups, and Repertoire
Peter Hauge (Royal Library, Copenhagen): Paolo Scalabrini (1713-1808) and his Time in Copenhagen
Discussion
15:15-15.30: Coffee break
15:30-17:00: Future directions, Preparation of the Rome Conference, Funding
•Choice of a committee for peer-review in view of the Rome Conference (Danish Academy, January 2019)
•Outline of a publication (book or journal issue, overarching themes)
•Funding