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Opera details:

Opera title:

Dido and Aeneas

Composer:

Henry Purcell

Language:

English

Synopsis:

Dido and Aeneas Synopsis

Libretto:

Dido and Aeneas Libretto

Translation(s):

Deutsch

Aria details:

Type:

aria

Role(s):

Sorceress

Voice(s):

Mezzo-Soprano

Act:

3.04

Previous scene: See see the flags
Next scene: Destruction's our delight

PURCELL • Dido & Aeneas • Z.626 [William Christie 1986 version]

HENRY PURCELL -•1659 † 1695•-
DIDO & ÆNEAS [Z.626] Tragic Opera in (a Prologue)Three Acts, 1689 or earlier.
LIBRETTO by Nahum Tate [1652 † 1715], after his play Brutus of Alba and Virgil's Aeneid.
First performance at Josias Priest's School in Chelsea, London, before December 1689, with a possible earlier performance as a Court Masque in 1684.

-• PERFORMERS
Vocals:
DIDO, Queen of Carthage, (also known as Eliza): Guillemette LAURENS, mezzo-soprano
BELINDA, her first Lady-in-Waiting: Jill FELDMAN, soprano,
SECOND WOMAN: Agnès MELLON, soprano
THE SORCERESS: Dominique VISSE, countertenor
SECOND SORCERESS: Barbara BORDEN, soprano
SPIRIT: Michel LAPLENIE, tenor
AENEAS, a Trojan Prince: Philippe CANTOR, baryton - bass
A TROJAN SAILOR: Etienne LESTRINGANT, tenor
CHORUS

-• ENSEMBLE: Les Arts Florissants, Orchestra and Choir
Direction: William Christie
(1986)

00:05 • OVERTURE (Adagio - Allegro)

-• ACT I •-
01:53, Shake the cloud from off your brow [Belinda] Banish Sorrow, Banish Care [Chorus]
02:55, Ah Belinda, I am press'd with torment [Dido]
06:33, Grief increases by concealing [Belinda, Dido] When monarchs unite, how happy their state [Chorus]
07:16, Whence could so much virtue spring? [Dido, Belinda]
09:11, Fear no danger to ensue [Belinda, Chorus]
10:44, See our royal guest appears [Belinda, Aeneas] Cupid only throws the dart [Chorus]
11:54, If not for mine, for Empire's sake [Aeneas] Pursue thy conquest, Love [Belinda] To the hills [Chorus]
14:10, The Triumphing Dance

-• ACT II •-
15:21, Prelude for the Witches: Wayward sisters, you that fright [Sorceress] Harm's our delight [Chorus]
17:35, The Queen of Carthage ... Ho! ho! ho! [Sorceress, First Witch, Chorus]
19:31, But e're we this perform [First Witch, Second Witch]
20:43, In our deep vaulted cell... Echo Dance of Furies [Chorus]
22:49, Ritornelle - Thanks to these lonesome vales [Belinda, Chorus]
26:24, Oft she visits this lone mountain [Second Woman]
28:20, Behold upon my bending spear [Aeneas, Dido] Haste, haste to town [Belinda, Chorus]
29:34, Stay Prince [Spirit, Aeneas]
31:38, Then since our chorus have sped [Chorus] The Grove's Dance

-• ACT III •-
33:07, Come away [Sailor, Chorus] The Sailors' Dance
35:27, See, see the flags [Sorceress, First Witch] Our next motion [Sorceress]
37:08, Destruction's our delight [Chorus]
The Witches Dance
39:15, Your counsel all is urged in vain [Dido, Belinda, Aeneas]
42:50, Great minds against themselves conspire [Chorus]
43:46,Thy hand, Belinda [Dido]
44:57, When I am laid in earth [Dido]
48:47, With drooping wings [Chorus]

-• END •-


Dido, the widowed Queen of Carthage, entertains the Trojan Prince Aeneas, shipwrecked on his way to Italy, where he will found a new Troy. Dido and Aeneas are in love. Witches plot Dido’s destruction and the Sorceress conjures a storm, to break out when the royal couple are hunting, and the impersonation of Mercury by one of her coven. The storm duly breaks and the courtiers hasten back to town, while the false Mercury tells Aeneas he must leave Dido and sail for Italy. Aeneas and his sailors prepare to leave, to the delight of the witches. Aeneas parts from Dido, who kills herself once he has gone, her death lamented by mourning cupids.

Some scholars argue for a date of composition as early at 1684. The story is based on Book IV of Virgil's Aeneid. It has been plausibly suggested that Purcell's short Opera 'Dido and Aeneas' was originally designed as a Court Masque, and possible topical political allusions have been proposed, notably in the light of the future James II's Catholicism, seen to deflect him from his duty as a future king, a hypothetical intrigue that casts the Jesuits as witches. The work owes something to John Blow’s Venus and Adonis of 1683. Most famous of all elements in the Opera is Dido's lament, 'When I am laid in earth', with its descending ground bass borrowed from current Venetian practice.



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Libretto/Lyrics/Text/Testo:

SORCERESS
Our next Motion
Must be to storm her lover on the ocean!
From the ruin of others our pleasures we borrow;
Elissa bleeds tonight, and Carthage flames tomorrow.

English Libretto or Translation:

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Full English translation Dido and Aeneas

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