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entry
Apr 2007
The Song is Ended,
but the Architrave lingers on.
As an ex-musician
who never made nearly the money I deserved, I am pleased to note
evidence of at
least one local musician who made it really big and then was not shy
about
mouthing off about it. Above the entrance to his home is still
inscribed:
AMPHYON THEBAS EGO DOMUM A.D. MDCCLIV
The
musician in question is Gaetano
Majorano (1710-1783) [standard Italian spelling is "Maiorano"],
the
great castrato mezzo-soprano known as "Caffarelli"
from the 18th century, when the altered male voice ruled the
operatic stage. The residence in question is at via Carlo de
Cesare 15 (photo),
at the south end of the Spanish Quarter,
just a few minutes walk from
the San
Carlo opera house. The inscription is a rather synthetic way of
saying
"Amphion is to Thebes
as I am to my home. 1754."
Majorano was born in Bitonto, near Bari,
and studied in Naples.
He sang in Naples
for some 20 years and was widely regarded as one of the great voices of
his
day. He appeared elsewhere in Italy
and abroad, as well. He was known for being surly, temperamental,
rude and, later in life,
generous and polite. Go figure. Both the
Venetian playwright Carlo Goldoni and the great librettist Metastasio
mention
him in their memoirs and letters as being a wondrous and obnoxious
talent.
After singing for Louis XV in Versailles
once, he was rewarded by the monarch with an ornate snuff box. Majorano
complained to the royal gift-bearing messenger that there was no
picture
of the
king on the box. The messenger told Caffarelli
that those were only for ambassadors. "Well, then," said the singer,
"have His Majesty get ambassadors to sing for him." He was arrested
once for sitting in the audience and shouting insults to singers on the
stage. He apparently mellowed enough
later in life to be offered the directorship of San Carlo, which he
refused.
Majorano
amassed enough wealth to buy an
estate nearer to
his birthplace farther south and also to build a beautiful home in Naples at the
address
mentioned above. The building was apparently designed by Sanfelice, one
of the
noted architects of the day. The inscription recalls the Greek myth of
the
twins Amphion and Zethus at work to build Thebes.
While Zethus, a hunter, had to grunt and struggle to lift stones into
place for
the city wall, Amphion, using the golden lyre given to him by Hermes,
played
and sang so sweetly that the stones lifted themselves and slid into
place. In
modern terminology, he had real chops. And so did Majorano, apparently:
"Just as Amphion built Thebes
with his great musical skill, so have I built my home with mine."
There are a few stories about the
inscription. Apparently, Leopold Mozart took his son, Wolfie, over to
the house in 1770 when they were on tour in Naples. Father explained
the mythology to son and also held Caffarelli up as an example of what
kind of money you could really make as a musician. (Obviously, the
lecture didn't take.) Another story claims that the inscription was at
some point during the singer's lifetime defaced with graffiti that
read "Ille cum, tu sine" (He
with, you without), referring to something--some things, really--that
Amphyon had, but Caffarelli no longer had. Some sources think the
graffiti must have been put there by a clever Neapolitan scugnizzo--street
kid. That's not too likely, since those kids couldn't (and still
can't) be depended on to handle a simple phrase in Italian, much less
Latin. It was probably a jealous rival.
Now, if only I could make some
money with my instrumentum
computatorium on the tela totius terrae, I could come up with
something similar.
---
Many
thanks to Knud Posborg for reminding me of this place.
[For related items, see the general entry on Castrati and Farinelli.]
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