Purcell : Dido and Aeneas, Z. 626 - Richard Hickox & Collegium Musicum 90
"Henry Purcell (1659 - 1695).
Dido and Aeneas, Z. 626.
Collegium Musicum 90.
Maria Ewing (soprano).
Sally Burgess (mezzosoprano).
Karl Daymond (baritone).
Patricia Rozario (soprano).
Mary Plazas (soprano).
James Bowman (countertenor).
Rebecca Evans (soprano).
François Testory (voice).
Dir: Richard Hickox.
Dido and Aeneas is an opera by the English Baroque composer Henry Purcell, from a libretto by Nahum Tate. The first known performance was at a girls' school in the spring of 1689. It comprises three acts and lasts about an hour, and is given catalogue number Z. 626.
It is based on a story from the fourth book of Virgil's Aeneid, of the legendary Queen of Carthage Dido and the Trojan refugee Aeneas. When Aeneas and his crew are shipwrecked in Carthage, he and the queen fall in love. However, Aeneas must soon leave to found Rome. Dido cannot live without him and awaits death.
This work is somewhat problematic, since no score in Purcell's hand is extant, and the only seventeenth century source is a libretto, possibly from the original performance. The difficulty is that no later sources follow the act divisions of the libretto, and the music to the prologue is lost. Part of this stems from the practice of the time of using such entertainments to add spice to another piece, such as a play, breaking up the original work and only using parts of it, rather than putting it on as a complete work. It is a monumental work in the Baroque opera, remembered as one of Purcell's (and perhaps England's) foremost operatic works. It may be considered Purcell's only true opera, as compared with his other musical dramatic works such as King Arthur and The Fairy-Queen, and is among the earliest English operas. It owes much to John Blow's Venus and Adonis, including structure and overall effect. "
