Howard Smither has written the first definitive work on the history
of the oratorio since Arnold Schering published his
Geschichte
des Oratoriums in 1911. This volume is the first of a
four-volume comprehensive study that offers a new synthesis of what
is known to date about the oratorio.
Volume 1, divided into three parts, opens with the examination of
the medieval, Renaissance, and early Baroque antecedents and
origins of the oratorio, with emphasis on Rome and Philip Neri's
Congregation of the Oratory and with special attention to the
earliest works for which the term
oratorio seems
appropriate. The second part recounts the development of the
oratorio in Italy, circa 1640-1720. It reviews the social contexts,
patrons, composers, poets, librettos, and music of the oratorio in
Italy, especially in Vienna and Paris.
The procedure adapted throughout the work is to treat first the
social context, particularly the circumstances of performance of
the oratorio in a given area and period, then to treat the
libretto, and finally the music. For each geographic area and
period, the author has selected for special attention a few
oratorios that appear to be particularly important or
representative. He has verified the information offered in the
specialized literature whenever possible by reference to the music
or documents. In a number of areas, particular seventeenth-century
Italy, in which relatively few previous studies have been
undertaken or secondary sources have proven to be inadequate, the
author has examined the primary sources in manuscript and printed
form -- music, librettos, and documents of early oratorio history.
Impressive research and intelligent integration of disparate
elements make this complicated, diffuse subject both readable and
accessible to the student of music.
Volume 2,
The Oratorio in the Baroque Era: Protestant Germany
and England, and Volume 3,
The Oratorio in the Classical
Era, continue and expand the study of oratorio history.
Although this series was originally announced as a three-volume
study, Smither will conclude with a fourth volume.
This new work--the first English-language study of the history of
the oratorio will become the standard work on its subject and an
enduring contribution to music and scholarship.
Originally published in 1977.
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