• Add description, images, menus and links to your mega menu

  • A column with no settings can be used as a spacer

  • Link to your collections, sales and even external links

  • Add up to five columns

  • Bärenreiter

    BA4083-90

    Handel: Rodrigo, HWV 5

    In stock and typically ships within 1 business day.
    • Composer: George Frideric Handel
    • Translator: Peter Brenner
    • Editor: Rainer Heyink
    • Piano reduction: Andreas Köhs
    • Instrumentation (this edition): Piano Reduction, Voice
    • Originally for: Opera
    • Work: Rodrigo, HWV 5
    • Work Languages: German, Italian
    • ISMN: 9790006535699
    • Size: 7.5 x 10.6 inches
    • Pages: 255
    • Urtext / Critical Edition

    Description

    "Rodrigo" was premiered in autumn 1707 in Florence and is therefore one of Handel's early stage works. The composer, only 22 years old, wrote a densely-woven musical scenario for his first opera composed in Italy. It masterfully portrays the dramatic states of mind of the protagonists surrounding the Iberian tyrant Rodrigo and the plot full of deception, betrayal, adultery, war as well as the transformation wrought by Rodrigo's abdication. The work was not, as was long thought, a commission from the Prince of Medici. Despite this, " Rodrigo" seems to have been so popular that Handel extended his stay in Italy and was able to compose several operas during the following period. in "Rodrigo", the mastery which made Handel's succeeding opera "Agrippina" such a success, is already clearly evident. "Agrippina" consequently made Handel's name famous throughout Europe and soon led to his first journey to London. The vocal score is based on Volume II/2 of the "Halle Handel Edition" (BA 4083). The appendix contains the surviving variants in the versions of the first performances from Handel's lifetime. - Based on the Urtext of the "Halle Handel Edition" - Original Italian text underlaid with German singing translation - Basso continuo and editorial additions in small print - Foreword in two languages (Ger/Eng)