BARENREITER - 345062
Rameau Io - Vocal Score
Jean-Phillippe Rameau
Voice
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Rameau Io - Vocal Score
Juilliard Store
Pickup available, usually ready in 4 hours
144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States
In Rameau's operatic oeuvre, "Io" is certainly the work shrouded in the most mystery: the acte de ballet has survived only in the form of a copy of the score and parts which was made by a collector from the generation after Rameau from the autograph that now is lost. Although the copy seems to have been used, presumably for a trial read-through, the work was apparently never regularly performed during Rameau's lifetime. And for good reason: the work breaks off abruptly at the beginning of the divertissement; neither the librettist nor a plan for a theatre location are known. Because of its incompleteness, "Io" was long regarded as Rameau's last work, but there is much to suggest that the composition must have been written between 1740 and 1745. The introduction to this edition examines the references regarding the dating as well as various hypotheses about performance possibilities and librettists.
The plot revolves around one of those typical mythological flirtations that are inevitably to be expected when Jupiter and a nymph, here Io, are involved. With the appearance of madness, La Folia, the work reaches a dramaturgical climax. However after this, the opera breaks off. In order to make the piece performable, the editors of “Opera Omnia Rameau” propose an addition to the divertissement as well as an ending borrowed from the ballet bouffon "Platée" in its 1745 version, which shows numerous parallels to "Io". Thus, these additions come as close as possible to Rameau's style of the 1740s while bringing the plot to a conclusion.
The plot revolves around one of those typical mythological flirtations that are inevitably to be expected when Jupiter and a nymph, here Io, are involved. With the appearance of madness, La Folia, the work reaches a dramaturgical climax. However after this, the opera breaks off. In order to make the piece performable, the editors of “Opera Omnia Rameau” propose an addition to the divertissement as well as an ending borrowed from the ballet bouffon "Platée" in its 1745 version, which shows numerous parallels to "Io". Thus, these additions come as close as possible to Rameau's style of the 1740s while bringing the plot to a conclusion.