Difference between revisions of "Nel cor più non mi sento"

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Its inclusion in the ''24 Italian Songs and Arias'' by Schirmer (Ed.) and  Alessandro Parisotti's ''Arie Antiche'' (1885) made it well known by vocal coaches and aspiring singers.   
Its inclusion in the ''24 Italian Songs and Arias'' by Schirmer (Ed.) and  Alessandro Parisotti's ''Arie Antiche'' (1885) made it well known by vocal coaches and aspiring singers.   


{{lang|it|Nel cor più non mi sento}} originally appears in Act II of the opera [[L'amor contrastato|''La molinara'']] (engl: The Beautiful Miller), also called {{lang|itL'amor contrastato}} (The Thwarted Love).  
{{lang|it|Nel cor più non mi sento}} originally appears in Act II of the opera [[L'amor contrastato|''La molinara'']] (engl: The Beautiful Miller), also called {{lang|it|L'amor contrastato}} (The Thwarted Love).  


The aria is sung by the eponymous beautiful miller, the mischievous Rachelina, who enjoys the attention of two men – the nobleman Calloandro and the notary Pistofolo.<ref name="Operamanager"/> While in aria collections, the piece is limited to Rachelina's part, in the opera, the song is picked up by the two men so attracted to her.  
The aria is sung by the eponymous beautiful miller, the mischievous Rachelina, who enjoys the attention of two men – the nobleman Calloandro and the notary Pistofolo.<ref name="Operamanager"/> While in aria collections, the piece is limited to Rachelina's part, in the opera, the song is picked up by the two men so attracted to her.