The oratorio, one of the significant musical genres to
emerge in the course of the mayor stylistic changes of the
seventeenth-century Italy, went on to occupy a secure place in the
history of European music in the following three centuries. This study
focuses on the early Italian oratorios, written or performed in Rome
between 1625 and 1665. It is the first to aim for an interdisciplinary
(from the perspective of libretto studies) examination of the rise of
the Italian oratorio in Rome. To answer the question of how the
development of the oratorio led to a clearly defined form, the
contemporary repertory is documented and represented in all its various
aspects. A representative number of oratorios are also analysed in both
literary and musical terms.Topics of particular importance to the study
are the relationship of recitative and ario, the ario types, the
dramaturgy of the oratorio and the practice of setting texts to music,
a subject that offers a point of contact with the early Baroque opera.
The existing state of oratorio research, particularly in relation to
questions of attribution, is critically examined in the light of both
known and new sources. The detailed description of two as yet
unexamined compositions by Giovan Francesco Marcorelli as well as
several fragments of additional oratorios is a valuable addition to our
knowledge of the early oratorio composition. The study is supplemented
by a cross-referenced index of all the known oratorios, including
previously unknown works by Roman composers such as Luigi Rossi,
Francesco Foggia and Giovan Francesco Marcorelli. A 600-page edition of
the surviving Roman librettos of the period makes basic sources
accessible for further research on CD ROM. Most of the 99 edited
librettos are published here either for the first time or at least for
the first time in 300 years. The book contains a complete index, as
well as numerous illustrations, charts and music
examples.