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Intermedio

(It.; Fr. intermède)

A form of musico-dramatic entertainment performed between the acts of plays in the Renaissance. Staged intermedi were inserted in classical comedies at Ferrara in the late 15th century, with a moresca (mimed dance) interspersed with songs or recitations explaining the action. Subjects included pastoral and hunting scenes, classical mythology and love stories. In the early 16th century this moresca type was supplanted by others with humanistic literary themes glorifying the ruling house and the absolutist regime.

At Florence spectacular intermedi were given on state occasions. The music for only two sets, for Medici weddings, has survived. In 1539 a play was given with six intermedi, set by Francesco Corteccia. The most lavish intermedi were those for Ferdinando de′ Medici's wedding to Christine of Lorraine in 1589: the music, mainly by Malvezzi and Marenzio, ranged from solo songs to ballets and polychoral madrigals for 60 singers and at least 24 instruments.

Monteverdi's Orfeo (1607) and other early operas owe much to the intermedio tradition. The principal environment of the intermedio itself in the early 17th century was in plays put on by literary academies, but after about 1650 intermedi were composed as entr′actes for public opera and may be seen as precursors of the 18th-century Neapolitan Intermezzo.

The French equivalent of the intermedio was the intermède, in which ballet played a major role. The intermèdes to Mazarin's Italian opera importations in mid-17th-century Paris proved more popular than the operas themselves. The full range of possibilities in intermèdes may be seen in those by Lully and Charpentier for Molière's comedies.



 
 
Wikipedia: intermedio
For the film, see Intermedio (film).

The intermedio, in Italian Renaissance music, is a kind of music which was performed between acts of a play. It was one of the important predecessors to opera (two of the others were monody and madrigal comedy).

Intermedi were written and performed from the late 15th century through the 17th century, although the peak of development of the genre was in the late 16th century. After 1600 the form merged with opera, for the most part, though intermedi continued to be used in non-musical plays in certain settings (for example in academies), and also continued to be performed between the acts of operas.

Very little actual music for intermedi survives, although a lot of music which was written for other occasions, for example madrigals and instrumental pieces, was used in intermedi. Often the subject matter of the intermedio was a mythological or pastoral story, which could be told in mime, by costumed singers or actors, or by dance. Aristocratic weddings and state occasions were frequent places where intermedi might be performed, in cities such as Florence and Ferrara; some of the best documentation of intermedi comes from weddings in the Medici family. Numerous drawings and engravings of the stage sets survive, as well as descriptions of the music and action. The actual music, instrumentation, presence of singers, dancers, mime, or elaborate staging were highly variable throughout the period, and sometimes all of these features were present.

As the intermedio developed in the 16th century, it became more and more elaborate, often becoming a "play within a play"; for example during a five-act play, an intermedio would consist of four parts, which might be presented as a four-part metaphor of time passing in the play (as in Il commodo, from a performance in Florence in 1539, where the four parts were morning, noon, afternoon, and night, represented with an elaborate mechanical artificial sun, with singing and dancing appropriate to each time). Some critics of the time noted that the intermedi had become so elaborate that the play had begun to serve as intermedi to the intermedi. Eventually the form acquired a tradition and cohesiveness that allowed it to stand on its own, and it was thus a logical development to combine the existing features with sung, acted parts, and be absorbed into opera.

The similar form which developed in France at the same time was called the intermède; it was more reliant on dance than the Italian version. The masque in England also had many similarities to the intermedio, although its origin was as an outgrowth of independent social entertainment, unlike the intermedio.

References and further reading

  • Article "Intermedio", in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
  • The New Harvard Dictionary of Music, ed. Don Randel. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-674-61525-5

 
 

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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Intermedio" Read more

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