Judit Zsovár

Anna Maria Strada, Prima Donna of G. F. Handel


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descriptions of her singing, and the period treatises – all of which is complimented with (c) my own practical experiences as a classical singer. The musical material per se can be misleading when it comes to the quality of singing, especially without the opinions of contemporary listeners who heard her voice and verify that Strada’s skills met all the technical, acoustic, musical, and expressive requirements these works imposed. Only after this foundation has been laid can the compositions, coupled with contemporary accounts of her singing, be interpreted as a sort of eighteenth-century ‘sound recordings’, preserving traces of her vocal personality. Setting Strada’s vocal profile, therefore, was like putting together remaining pieces of a puzzle or mosaic. This is what the cover of this book, my own painting, metaphorically illustrates.

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      Early Years

       After setting out the (new) findings about Strada’s birth and death dates, parents, and possible educational background; the first chapter discusses the modern singing school (that of Pistocchi), the new singing style, and the singers connected to Strada. This leads further to an introduction of the cultural environment of the Venetian Republic as a venue of Strada’s first professional years, marked by her collaboration with Vivaldi, including the city’s operatic life with the attendant political, financial, and social networks. The second part of the chapter deals with Strada’s Venetian season of 1720/1721 at the Sant’Angelo theatre, with emphasis placed on her being as the first specifically high coloratura soprano that Vivaldi, as an opera composer, worked with, as well as her performances in Milan (1720 and 1721), Livorno (1722), and Lucca (1724).

      Keywords: Milan, Venice, Vivaldi, S. Angelo, Teatro alla Moda, high coloratura soprano