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CD Included Music and Wonder at the Medici Court The 1589 Interludes for La pellegrinaNina Treadwell |
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The role of music and theater in Medicean politics "Treadwell's approach is novel . . . and essential to understanding how a musical and dramatic entertainment could assume such an important role in defining Medicean power for both Florentines and outside visitors." —Massimo Ossi, Indiana University
"The Florentine celebration of 1589 was the most lavish court entertainment on record, combining innovations in solo song, orchestration, ballet, and staging—all in the service of displaying Medici power. In her book, Nina Treadwell examines the ways members of the Medici court deployed these new modes of artistic expression to further their own agendas. An accomplished performer, she also views the intermedii from the vantage points of the musicians whose energies, technical skills, and interpretive strategies made this event so memorable, and she factors in eye-witness accounts to produce something like an ethnography, thereby demonstrating the both the effects and limits of Medici control. A stunning scholarly achievement." —Susan McClary, University of California, Los Angeles
"For anyone studying Renaissance festivals, Treadwell's book is essential, for she is the only author to address the combined impact of visual and aural stimuli in the creation of amazement and wonder." —Anne MacNeil, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill On May 2, 1589, the Medici court staged the most elaborate entertainment yet produced in Florence. The intermedii (interludes) performed during Girolamo Bargagli's comedy La pellegrina were the high point of a series of celebrations mobilized by the newly proclaimed Grand Duke of Florence—Ferdinando I de' Medici—for his wedding to Christine of Lorraine. These interludes were arguably the most well documented multimedia entertainment of the Medici principate. CD included.
Listen to tracks from the companion CD:
Track 8: "Belle ne fe natura" Track 10: "Chi dal delfino aita" Track 28: "Godi turba mortal"
Nina Treadwell is Associate Professor of Music at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her work is informed by her experience as a performer on plucked-string instruments of the Renaissance and Baroque periods and by her interest in gender studies.
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Distribution: World Publication date: 10/27/2008 |