- Concert Aria
A concert aria is normally a free-standing
aria or opera-like scene ("scena") composed for singer and orchestra, written specifically for performance in concert rather than as part of anopera . Concert arias have usually been composed for particular singers, the composer always bearing that singer's voice and skill in mind when composing the work.Apart from only denoting loose arias for singer and orchestra, the term is also used to indicate arias which were specifically composed for insertion into already-existing operas, either as additions to the score or as substitutions for other arias. These are sometimes performed in concerts because they are no longer required for their original purpose, though they were not, strictly speaking, composed for performance in concert.
The concert arias which are most commonly-performed today were written by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , but there are many examples by other composers, such as:
*"Ah perfido!" byLudwig van Beethoven
*"Der Wein" forsoprano and orchestra byAlban Berg
*"Phaedra" byBenjamin Britten (written forJanet Baker )
*"Scena di Berenice" byJoseph Haydn Mozart concert arias
Among the more well-known of Mozart's concert arias are:
*"Popoli di Tessaglia!", K.316, for soprano, with its famous G6s - Gs above high C
*"Nehmt meinen Dank, ihr holden Gönner!", K383, for soprano,
*"Ch'io mi scordi di te", K.505, written forNancy Storace
*"Bella mia fiamma", K.528, written forJosepha Duschek
*"Per Questa Bella Mano", K.612, for bass,double bass obbligato, and orchestraSources
Libonati, Rodrigo Maffei, [http://www.geocities.com/rmlibonati/concertar.html 'Mozart Concert Arias']
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.