Giovanni Battista Velluti, colloquially "Giambattista" (28 January 1780 – 22 January 1861), was an Italian castrato. Considered "the last great castrato",[1] he had a reputation of being something of a diva, with some singers refusing to appear with him.
Biography
editBorn in Pausula (near Macerata), Italy, a local doctor castrated him at the age of eight as treatment for a cough and high fever. Velluti's father, who had planned on a military career for his son, enrolled him in musical training. He became close friends with Luigi Cardinal Chiaramonte, the man who would become Pope Pius VII, after singing a cantata sometime in his teenage years. In 1800, he made his debut at Forlì.
The last great castrato roles were composed specifically for him: Arsace in Rossini's Aureliano in Palmira (1813) and Armando in Meyerbeer's Il crociato in Egitto (1824). He made his London debut in 1825 in Il crociato in Egitto. The crowds reacted poorly to his initial performances as he was the first castrato to appear in London in 25 years, but he drew crowds until the end of his career. In 1826 he took over management of The King's Theatre in London and appeared there in Aureliano in Palmira and Morlacchi's Tebaldo ed Isolina. However, his career as a theatre manager ended following financial quarrels over extra pay for the chorus. He returned to London in 1829, but appeared only in concerts. Upon his retirement from the stage, he became an agriculturist and died in 1861.
References
edit- ^ Warrack, John; West, Ewan (1996). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-19-280028-2.
- Panati, Charles, Panati's Extraordinary Endings of Practically Everything and Everybody, Perennial Library, 1989.
- Crowe, Robert (2017) Giovanni Battista Velluti in London, 1825-1829: Literary Constructions of the Last Operatic Castrato, PhD Musicology, (Boston University). Dissertation committee: Joshua Rifkin, Victor Coelho and Silke Leopold.