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Transcript

BY:

PARTS OF THE OPERA

Raquel Soria

Arianna Villagómez

Ilona Mariasik

Sandra Herrero

soloist

interludes

choir and ballets

Aria

RECITATIVES

OVERTURE

They are parts sing by soloists in which it is developed the action. To make it possible, we may use a declaimed and unadorned text or lyrics. There are two types of recitatives:

The musical parts generally shorter than the overture, used to link different sections together.

  • Interludes: It also can be called as symphony, it is most commonly refers to a 17th or 18th century orchestral piece used as an interlude to an opera.
  • Interludes: The orchestra plays a short music between the scenes of the opera. Do not confuse with intermezzo that is when the singers do a rest, the interludes actually are part of the opera.

The instrumental part that serves as the introduction to the opera.

  • Overture in music is the term originally applied to the instrumental introduction to an opera. The idea of an instrumental opening to opera existed during the 17th century. In the 19th century the overture was that partion of the music which takes place before the curtain rises.

The most important and flamboyant part of the opera. Realized only by soloists: now the action stops and the singer express her or his feelings by his or her voice.

Ballet is a type of performance dance that originated in the Italian Renaissance Courts of the 15th century and later developed into a concert dance form in France and Russia.

A choir (also known as a chorale or chorus) is a musical ensemble of singers. The farmer term is very often applied to groups applicated with a church, then we have the groups that perform in theatres or concert halls. During the Renaissance sacred choral music was the principal type of formally notated music in Western Europe. Throughout the era, hundreds of masses and motes were composers for a capella choir.

A soloist is most often used to refer to the performer that perform a solo. In music, a solo (from the iItalian solo, meaning abre) is a piece or a section of a piece played or sing by a single performer.

In the Baroque and Classical periods, the word solo was virtually equivalent to sanata, and could refer either to a piece for one melody instrument with accompaniment, or to a sanata for an unaccompanied melody instrument.

  • Secco in which it's only accompained by a basso continuo.
  • Acompagnato in which we accompany it with an orchestra.

aria

Interludes

choirs

ballets

soloist

OVERTURE

secco

acompagnato

EXAMPLE:

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