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CASTRATO
A castrato is a male soprano, mezzo-soprano, or alto voice produced either by castration of the singer before puberty or who, because of an endocrinological condition, never reaches sexual maturity. Therefore, his voice never deepens.
Castration before puberty (or in its early stages) prevents the boy's larynx from being fully transformed by the normal physiological effects of puberty. As a result, the vocal range of prepubescence (shared by boys and girls) is largely retained, and the voice develops into adulthood in a unique way. As the castrato's body grows (especially in lung capacity and muscular strength), and as his musical training and maturity increase, his voice develops a range, power and flexibility quite different from the singing voice of the adult female, but also markedly different from the higher vocal ranges of the uncastrated adult male (see soprano, mezzo-soprano, alto, sopranist and contralto).
The term castrato was often used to indicate the high register created by the young men who sang the castrato style. The typical register of a castrato was above that of a "normal" soprano or alto voice, resulting in the creation of a temporary range in Italian music.
[edit] History of castratism
The practice of castration of singers began in the 16th century, with the use of castrati to sing the top line in Western European chapel choirs, because the Roman Catholic Church had traditionally banned females from singing in church. In the late 1550s, the Duke of Ferrara had castrati in his chapel choir, the Munich court chapel from 1574 and in 1599 the Papal (Sistine) Chapel choir was formally described as having castrati. Elsewhere in Europe, castrati were in Württemberg from 1610, in Vienna from 1637 and about a decade later in Dresden. In papal Bull of 1589, Pope Sixtus V approved formally the recruitment of castrati for the choir of St. Peter. The practice reached its peak in 17th and 18th century opera. In Naples several barbershops had a sign that castration was performed there. The male heroic lead would often be written for a castrato singer (in the operas of Handel for example). When such operas are performed today, a woman (possibly cross-dressing as a man in a so-called trouser role) or a countertenor takes these roles. However, some Baroque operas with parts for castrati are so complex and difficult that they cannot be performed today.[citation needed]
Castration was by no means a guarantee of a promising career. During the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, only approximately 1%[citation needed] of fully or partially castrated boys developed into successful singers.
Probably the most famous castrato was the 18th century singer Carlo Broschi, known as Farinelli. In 1994 a film was made about him, Farinelli Il Castrato. In the 17th century, Queen Christina of Sweden was so enamoured of the voices of the castrati that she temporarily halted a war between her country and Poland so that she could borrow the castrato Ferri from the Polish king for a two-week command performance.
In 1870 the practice of castrating promising boy singers (or castratism) was outlawed in Italy, the last country where it was still in custom. In 1902, Pope Leo XIII pronounced a decree which banned the use of castrati in church music forever. The last of the castrati to leave the Chapel choir after this decree was Alessandro Moreschi, who departed in 1913.
[edit] Modern castrati and similar voices
The only acknowledged castrato to make phonograph recordings was Alessandro Moreschi. Moreschi recorded gramophone records for the Gramophone & Typewriter Company in 1902 and again in 1904 (the recording is on an external website)[1]. Critical opinion is divided about Moreschi and his recordings. Some critics feel Moreschi was a mediocre singer, and his recordings accordingly of interest only as a demonstration of a castrato's voice. Other critics detect the remains of a quite talented singer who was unfortunately past his prime by the time he recorded.
One of the solo recordings of Alessandro Moreschi (help·info)
So-called "natural castrati" are born with hormonal disorders that reproduce the vocal effects of castration without the surgeon's knife. Radu Marian and Jorge Cano stand out as extraordinary "natural castrati". Both are gifted talents, providing the opportunity to appreciate voices that incarnate the past castrati.
Some uncastrated male singers are able to sing in the soprano register, apparently without the use of the falsetto voice; they are known as endocrinological castrati[citation needed]. Some men can use falsetto to sing in the soprano range. Both are termed sopranistas. Very few such singers perform today, as this voice type is extremely rare. Sopranistas are able to perform most music which was written for castrati, and composers such as Rossini wrote parts specifically for sopranista[citation needed].
[edit] Popular references
- The European co-production film Farinelli Il Castrato deals with the life, career, frustration and brother (a director-composer) of the castrato known by that stage name, and includes performances by a unique reconstruction combining a male high contratenor and a low female soprano as if one castrato voice.
- The disinterment of Farinelli's body in 2006 for scientific analysis was widely reported.
- Anne Rice's novel Cry to Heaven, although a romantic novel, is based upon solid research and notwithstanding the novelization, captures a strong sense of the training, and world, of castrati singers in 18th Century Venice and Naples.
- Kingsley Amis's novel The Alteration deals in part with Hubert Anvil, a ten-year-old singer in the choir of St. George's Basilica, Coverley, whose mentors decide his voice is too precious to lose and that he should become a castrato (hence the title).
- The Last Castrato is a psychological thriller about two young boys, fraternal twins, who must suffer castration for their art.
[edit] Famous castrati
The most celebrated of the castrati singers were (in chronological order):
[edit] External links
[edit] See also
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