
Choreography: Nacho Duato
Music: Antonio Vivaldi (Nisi Dominus RV 608, Stabat Mater RV 621, Salve Regina RV 616, Concerto RV 439 “La notte”); Karl Jenkins (Palladio)
Sets: Jaffar Chalabi
Costumes: Francis Montesinos
Light Design: Brad Fields
World premiere by Compañía
Nacional de Danza at Palacio
de Festivales de Cantabria,
Santander, April 5th, 2002.
Just a couple of hundred years ago, sopranos were at the height of their popularity. They travelled around Europe singing opera and were considered on-stage heroes, and their art has been appreciated worldwide for centuries.
The last castrato died just a
few decades ago, during the 20th
century. The custom of castrating
predates Jesus Christ, and the
original motives were somewhat
different. Egyptians used castration
as a punishment, the Arabs used
it for religious reasons, and the
Turks employed it to create a groupof men with no sexual urgess to
guard their harems. However, in
Italy castration had a completely
different purpose.
During the first century AD, when the apostle Saint Paul wrote: “Mulier tacet in ecclesia” (“women shall remain in silence when they are in church”), he could hardly have imagined the effect his words would have some centuries later. Choirs without female voices, composed of countertenors and pre-puberty children, worked for some time, but as musical composition demanded an ever-wider vocal range, choirs needed men with a female voice, that is to say castrated men. So, in the mid-16th century the practise of castration arrived in Europe from the East.
At the beginning of the 17th century, a new type of music, opera, was taking shape in Italy. For
castrati this was a golden opportunity for one simple reason: women were banned from taking part. As a result, from when the first public theatre was opened in Venice in 1637 until the mid-18th century,
castrati dominated the world of opera and became irreplaceable.
Castration produced extraordinary vocal skills and a rather peculiar colour to voices, which meant castrati were in great demand and also highly paid. Singing schools sprang upall over Italy to raise the belcanto art form to its highest possible level. Castrati were normally trained for between six and eight years at such schools, and private tutors also offered their services outside schools.
Castrati – (Italian
Castrato) Male singers, castrated
before reaching puberty in order
to retain their soprano or alto
voices. In this manner the childlike
timbre is kept, allowing them
to sing soprano in a strange
manner due to the normal development
of their lungs. Castrati were
much more common within ecclesiastical
institutions, where women were
not allowed to sing, and in theatres
during the 16th, 17th and 18th
centuries. They were held in
very high prestige during these
times.