

O CESSATE DI PIAGARMI LYRIC ANALYSIS SERIES
This series is an encouragement to beginning singers in preparing a vocal solo. (professional editions used for production) (includes complete listings for kids - teens) Sing The Songs Of Frank Loesser Low Voice Sing The Songs Of Frank Loesser High Voice Opera Arie - Tenor, with Historical Recordings Musical Theatre Classics Mezzo Soprano Vol. Legendary Ladies of Broadway: 1960s - 1970's Legendary Ladies of Broadway: 1940s - 1950's Legendary Ladies of Broadway: 1920s - 1930's In Session With the Jazz Masters: Ella Fitzgerald Gilbert and Sullivan for Singers - Soprano Gilbert and Sullivan for Singers - Bari/Bass Scroll this page, or review contents quickly by clicking on titles: Any titles you have selected will be listed, you can then remove titles or change quantity before checkout. To order, click the blue "buy" button for any title(s). The below titles are maintained as regular inventory. The editions linked here may differ somewhat, but they are also likely to be overly romantic in style.Click on "popular" for more contemporary titles,Īll collections on this page include a CD for rehearsal/performance as well as the piano/vocal sheet music, all have been reviewed by me (doctorate in music) before being added to this page. Though they aren’t very stylistically correct, they are perhaps the most familiar. The pieces in that collection were generally set with very romanticized accompaniments. Important note: This Baroque Italian aria is perhaps best known as it appears in Schirmer’s Twenty-Four Italian Songs and Arias. According to, it is by Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681-1732).attributed to Benedetto Marcello (1686-1739).Title: Quella fiamma che m’accende (The first line of the aria)Īlternative Title: Il mio bel foco (The first line of the recit.) Range: C♯4 – C5 (D5 with given ornamentation).Title: O cessate di piagarmi (from an aria in Pompeo) IPA for Sebben, crudele, courtesy of IPANow! transcription software. Search YouTube for Pur dicesti, o bocca bella.Range: D3 – F♯4 (Voice line in Bass Clef).Note: This is Parisotti’s well known arrangement.For more stylistically correct versions of most of these common Italian songs and arias, consider purchasing 26 Italian Songs and Arias, edited by John Glenn Paton, which is available in Medium High and Medium Low editions that each come with an accompaniment CD. The pieces in that collection were sometimes set with less than historically accurate accompaniments. Important note: This Baroque Italian aria is perhaps best known as it appears in Schirmer’s Twenty-Four Italian Songs and Arias, most of which had appeared previously in the Anthology of Italian Song of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. If you are not able to see these, consider installing a more universal Unicode font on your computer. Note: Art Song Central uses the Unicode symbols for sharps (♯) and flats (♭) in these song posts. IPA for Se tu m’ami, se sospiri, courtesy of IPANow! transcription software. Se Tu M’ami (formerly Attributed to Pergolesi) – Cecilia Bartoli.

Source: German, French and Italian Song Classics.Source: Anthology of Italian Song of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.Text: Paolo Antonio Rolli (1687-1765) (Link is to Italian Wikipedia entry) Parisotti attributed it to Giovanni Pergolesi (1710-1736).
