- Source: The Pirates (opera)
The Pirates is an opera by composer Stephen Storace with an English libretto by James Cobb. The work was partly adapted from Storace's 1786 opera Gli equivoci and is remarkable as affording one of the earliest instances of the introduction of a grand finale into an English opera. The work premiered at the Haymarket Theatre on November 21, 1792. The opera became a huge success and is considered by many music critics to be Storace's best composition. It was chosen as the starring prima buffa to be performed for King George III at the King's Theatre, London on 16 May 1794.
Roles
Musical numbers
Storace reused some of the music from his 1785 opera Gli sposi malcontenti in The Pirates.
Later productions
On 29 November 1827, the opera was revived at Drury Lane with the title Isidore de Merida. Most of Storace's music was retained but set to a new libretto, probably due to the original libretto's lack of publication.
References
Works consulted
Cobb, James (1792), The Songs, Duets, Trios, Chorusses, &c. In The Pirates, An Opera, In Three Acts, London: E. Cox
Girdham, Jane (2002), "Pirates, The", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press
External links
The Pirates (vocal score): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
The Pirates at the Internet Archive (vocal score)
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