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Castrato Phantoms

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A new mapping of castrato afterlives in modern RomeAround 1830, opera houses stopped using castrati, and Rome and the Vatican became home to their glorious singing, engineered by surgery and intens...
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  • 10 February 2026
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A new mapping of castrato afterlives in modern Rome

Around 1830, opera houses stopped using castrati, and Rome and the Vatican became home to their glorious singing, engineered by surgery and intensive vocal training. Castrati were long mired in secrecy, obfuscations, and lies about their origin and conditions, not least the last of them, Alessandro Moreschi. Musicologist Martha Feldman declines to accept these deep-seated mysteries and concealments. After a decade and more of digging through archives and family histories comes her exciting transdisciplinary and quasi-cinematic account of Moreschi, whose recordings preserve the only sonic trace of a solo castrato.

Yet Moreschi’s story extends far beyond him. It opens up intrigues, politics, and histories of the Vatican, everyday histories of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Rome, the world of Roman opera, the city’s unique mélange of sacred and vernacular tropes, and representations of Rome by iconic film director Federico Fellini. Moreschi and Fellini turn out to have been related by marriage, but also to share synergies grounded in Rome’s persistent inclination to vernacularize the sacred. Far from telling of one anomalous figure, Feldman’s gripping history convinces readers that Moreschi, like Fellini, can be read as an improbable index of Roman consciousness, both during his own life and well beyond.

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Price: $38.00
Pages: 480
Publisher: Zone Books
Imprint: Zone Books
Publication Date: 10 February 2026
ISBN: 9781945861130
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

MUSIC / Ethnomusicology, Theory of music and musicology, PSYCHOLOGY / Psychotherapy / Psychoanalysis

"Feldman provides an exceptional guide to a culture that produced castrati only to discard them, and to the haunted sense of too-lateness that left Moreschi outside of his own life."---Dan Piepenbring, Harper's Magazine
Martha Feldman is the Ferdinand Schevill Distinguished Service Professor of Music at the University of Chicago. She is the author of three awarding-winning monographs: City Culture and the Madrigal at Venice; Opera and Sovereignty: Transforming Myths in Eighteenth-Century Italy; and The Castrato: Reflections on Natures and Kinds.