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How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto

Heroic male operatic roles were not always limited to what is today mainly known as male voices (tenor or baritone/bass). In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries prepubescent boys were often castrated in order to keep their voices within the treble range. Some of these boys were extremely musica...

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Main Author: Pretorious, Ane Sophia
Other Authors: Sandmeier, Rebekka
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: College of Music 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Pretorious, Ane Sophia
author2 Sandmeier, Rebekka
author_browse Pretorious, Ane Sophia
Sandmeier, Rebekka
author_facet Sandmeier, Rebekka
Pretorious, Ane Sophia
author_sort Pretorious, Ane Sophia
collection Thesis
description Heroic male operatic roles were not always limited to what is today mainly known as male voices (tenor or baritone/bass). In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries prepubescent boys were often castrated in order to keep their voices within the treble range. Some of these boys were extremely musical and after many years of vigorous training, went on to become renowned singers. The singing castrati were famous for their ethereal vocal abilities as well as ‘angelic’ vocal timbre. During the castrati’s reign, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote what is speculated to be the first operatic prepubescent boy role to be sung by a female en travesti, which set in motion a new opera tradition. Between 1790 and 1825 the convention of castration purely for the sake of voice preservation began to lose strength until the complete demise of these celebrated singers in 1922. From then on theatres began to substitute female singers, falsettists and countertenors into these heroic male roles. The repertoire of mezzo-sopranos today consists mainly of these prepubescent boy and adult heroic male roles. Based on the various physiological differences between the castrato and female body and larynx, this study focused mainly on proving how Mozart wrote idiomatically differently for the castrato and the female voice. The secondary aim was to determine the influence of socio-political climate on the perception of these roles by past and present audiences, as well as to uncover the various difficulties facing contemporary mezzosopranos. Recommendations aimed at mezzo-sopranos were formed from a mezzo-soprano’s perspective
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:38:52.693Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher College of Music
publisherStr College of Music
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30531 How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto Pretorious, Ane Sophia Sandmeier, Rebekka Music Heroic male operatic roles were not always limited to what is today mainly known as male voices (tenor or baritone/bass). In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries prepubescent boys were often castrated in order to keep their voices within the treble range. Some of these boys were extremely musical and after many years of vigorous training, went on to become renowned singers. The singing castrati were famous for their ethereal vocal abilities as well as ‘angelic’ vocal timbre. During the castrati’s reign, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote what is speculated to be the first operatic prepubescent boy role to be sung by a female en travesti, which set in motion a new opera tradition. Between 1790 and 1825 the convention of castration purely for the sake of voice preservation began to lose strength until the complete demise of these celebrated singers in 1922. From then on theatres began to substitute female singers, falsettists and countertenors into these heroic male roles. The repertoire of mezzo-sopranos today consists mainly of these prepubescent boy and adult heroic male roles. Based on the various physiological differences between the castrato and female body and larynx, this study focused mainly on proving how Mozart wrote idiomatically differently for the castrato and the female voice. The secondary aim was to determine the influence of socio-political climate on the perception of these roles by past and present audiences, as well as to uncover the various difficulties facing contemporary mezzosopranos. Recommendations aimed at mezzo-sopranos were formed from a mezzo-soprano’s perspective 2019-08-26T09:58:59Z 2019-08-26T09:58:59Z 2019 2019-08-23T09:49:17Z Master Thesis Masters Master of Music http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30531 Eng application/pdf College of Music Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Music
Pretorious, Ane Sophia
How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
thesis_degree_str Master's
title How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
title_full How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
title_fullStr How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
title_full_unstemmed How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
title_short How did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a Mezzosoprano en travesti? A comparison between the roles of Cherubino and Sesto
title_sort how did wolfgang amadeus mozart adjust his compositional technique when writing for a mezzosoprano en travesti a comparison between the roles of cherubino and sesto
topic Music
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30531
work_keys_str_mv AT pretoriousanesophia howdidwolfgangamadeusmozartadjusthiscompositionaltechniquewhenwritingforamezzosopranoentravestiacomparisonbetweentherolesofcherubinoandsesto