"La Mantovana" or "Il Ballo di Mantova" (Mantua Dance) is a popular sixteenth-century song attributed to the Italian tenor Giuseppe Cenci, also known as Giuseppino del Biado, (d. 1616)[1] to the text Fuggi, fuggi, fuggi da questo cielo. Its earliest known appearance in print is in Biado's collection of madrigals of the year 1600. The melody, later also known as "Ballo di Mantova and "Aria di Mantova", gained a wide popularity in Renaissance Europe, being recorded variously as the Flemish "Ik zag Cecilia komen", the Polish "Pod Krakowem", the Romanian "Carul cu boi", the Scottish "My mistress is prettie", and the Ukrainian "Kateryna Kucheryava". It is best known as the melody of Bedřich Smetana's Vltava and of the Israeli national anthem "Hatikvah".
Appearances in classical music
"La Mantovana" appears in Il Scolaro by Gasparo Zanetti (1645),[2] as "Ballo di Mantova" in Duo tessuti con diversi solfeggiamenti, scherzi, perfidie et oblighi by Giuseppe Giamberti (1657) and as "An Italian Rant" in John Playford's The Dancing Master (3rd edition, 1665).[3][4]
"Fuggi, fuggi, dolente cor", a version of the madrigal setting, provides the source material for Biagio Marini's 1655 trio sonata in G minor (Op. 22, Sonata sopra "Fuggi dolente core").[5]
A melodic relative is Ack Värmeland, du sköna.[3]
The melody was famously used by the Czech composer Bedřich Smetana in his symphonic poem Vltava (Moldau) from his cycle celebrating Bohemia, Má vlast:[3]
The motif was also used by the French composer Camille Saint-Saëns in the second movement of "Rhapsodie Bretonne". "La Montavana" also appears in the song "Kucheriava Katerina", whose composer is unknown.
Samuel Cohen, a 19th century Jewish settler in Ottoman Palestine (now, Israel) who was born in Moldavia, adapted a Romanian variation of "La Mantovana" – "Carul cu boi" – to set Naftali Herz Imber's poem, "Hatikvah"; which later became the Israeli national anthem.[6][7] Another, similar Romanian folk song, "Cucuruz cu frunza-n sus", is also based on "La Mantovana".
Lyrics
Italian | English |
---|---|
Fuggi fuggi fuggi da questo cielo |
Flee, flee, flee from this sky, |
Other appearances
It appears also in children's songs: German "Alle meine Entchen" (All My Ducklings) and Czech "Kočka leze dírou" (The Cat Is Crawling through the Hole).[8]
References
- ↑ John Walter Hill. ""Cenci, Giuseppe"". Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 21, 2010. (Subscription required.)
- ↑ "Il scolaro (Zanetti, Gasparo)". IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- 1 2 3 Seroussi, Edwin (16 April 2013). "Hatikvah: Conceptions, Receptions and Reflections". Jewish Music Research Centre (in Hebrew). Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- ↑ "Italian Rant (An)". Traditional Tune Archive. 26 June 2021. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- ↑ Sonata sopra 'Fuggi dolente core', Op. 22, No. 21 (Marini, Biagio): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- ↑ "Ha-Tiqvah", Ingeb.org
- ↑ Zion, Ilan Ben; Rabinovich, Abraham (16 April 2013). "How an unwieldy romantic poem and a Romanian folk song combined to produce 'Hatikva'". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
- ↑ Maxner, Rebekah (21 February 2022). "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star Part IV: From minor Twinkle branches into the major key [Printables]". Rebekah Maxner. Retrieved 25 September 2023.