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Scena

Scena is an Italian noun meaning scene or stage. In general theatre usage, a scena is a subdivision of an act, typically marked by a change of setting or a shift in characters. Librettos, scripts, and stage directions use scenes to organize the narrative flow and guide performance, blocking, and pacing.

In opera and other vocal music, scena has a more specialized sense: a dramatic unit for a

The term remains in use primarily within musicology and theatre studies, helping distinguish tightly constructed vocal

single
singer,
often
combining
recitative
with
one
or
more
arias
or
musical
numbers.
In
the
Baroque
and
Classical
periods,
composers
sometimes
published
standalone
scena
or
a
“scena
e
aria”
sequence
as
concert
pieces
or
audition
repertoire.
These
units
emphasize
dramatic
expression
within
a
compact
form
and
can
be
embedded
within
larger
operatic
scenes
or
acts.
dramatic
pieces
from
broader
stage
scenes.
Etymology-wise,
scena
comes
from
Italian,
meaning
scene
or
stage,
and
is
tied
to
the
same
linguistic
lineage
as
the
English
word
scene.
Related
concepts
include
scene,
aria,
and
recitative,
which
together
describe
the
building
blocks
of
many
operatic
and
theatrical
works.