Non piu andrai synopsis of romeo

          Figaro gives Cherubino mocking advice about his new, harsh, military life from which all luxury, and especially women, will be totally excluded (aria: "Non più....

          Non più andrai

          Aria in Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro

          "Non più andrai" (You shall go no more) is an aria for bass from Mozart's 1786 opera The Marriage of Figaro, K.

          492. The Italian libretto was written by Lorenzo Da Ponte based on a stage comedy by Pierre Beaumarchais, La folle journée, ou le Mariage de Figaro (1784).

          Figaro sings a cheerful and amusing parody on military life and heroism (“Non più andrai”).

        1. He very much understands the importance of ornamentation and the emotional impact of an appoggiatura –his 'non più andrai' was enhanced by.
        2. Figaro gives Cherubino mocking advice about his new, harsh, military life from which all luxury, and especially women, will be totally excluded (aria: "Non più.
        3. He's a boy played by a woman; he's neither a child nor an adult; he exercises a rather strange erotic pull on the Countess; he infuriates the count, who.
        4. The character of Don Giovanni bears a striking resemblance to the infamous Venetian adventurer Giacomo Casanova, who was living in Prague during.
        5. It is sung by Figaro at the end of the first act.[1]

          Context

          Further information on the plot and characters: The Marriage of Figaro § Synopsis

          At the end of the first act, Count Almaviva finds Cherubino hiding in Susanna's quarters.

          The Count was already suspicious that Cherubino had designs on his wife, Countess Rosina, and overall disapproves of his loose lifestyle. However, he cannot punish Cherubino, as he himself was only in Susanna's quarters to proposition her.

          The Count sends Cherubino away instead, to his regiment in Seville. In this aria, Figaro teases Cherubino about his Spartan military future, in stark contrast with the