Does anyone know why the drinking aria,"Libiamo" in Verdi's la Traviata is known as "Brindisi"? Brindisi is a place in Italy, but what is the connection? I have long been curious about this.
A "brindisi" is quite simply an Italian word for a "toast", hence its inclusion in 'La Traviata' when the characters 'Alfredo' and 'Violetta begin it, and the chorus then join in.
Other operas also containing a "brindisi", for example, are:
'Macbeth' / 'Otello' / 'Cavalleria Rusticana' / 'Lucrezia Borgia'.
Grazie molto! "Toast" makes more sense, and is obviously more appropriate than a distorted German phrase. Rather creepy...... Shortly after I left my computer early this afternoon, I heard Pavarotti singing the very aria on Classic FM!
Margaretta.
Pavarotti's successor should be Juan Diego Flores.....I have never heard such amazing singing.......an incredible voice, and he is still a young man. I think he will go to the top (in more ways than one) in the world of opera.