Results for Bartolomeo Tromboncino
On this page:
 
Artist:

Bartolomeo Tromboncino

  • Born 1470 in near Verona
  • Died in near Venice
  • Period: Renaissance (1450-1599)
  • Country: Italy
  • Genres: Chamber, Vocal

Biography

The stormy-tempered Tromboncino was among the most gifted early composers of the frottola. More than 170 of such pieces are ascribed to him. As a teacher, his influence was great enough that 20 years after his death his students in Venice were still used as a measure of quality in singing. By the account of his own letters, he grew up in Verona. His first music teacher was probably his father, Bernardino Piffaro, who was a player in the municipal wind ensemble. By the age of 20, he was already working as a trombonist for Francesco Il Gonzaga in Mantua, where he played at various feasts and events as part of the Mantuan wind ensemble.

His fortunes thereafter rose about as rapidly as they could. Throughout the late '90s, especially, his name is frequently mentioned in Mantuan documents in contexts alluding in one way or another to his musical talents or the singularity of his character. These include many requests for music from him, praise of him between different parties, and several gifts of money. The latter came from Isabella d'Este who, by 1590, had made him part of her personal retinue, where he served as lutenist, composer, and tutor.

Although he seems to have been the favorite of d'Este and her husband, there is great evidence that he was of a stormy, combative disposition. Besides having to flee to Venice in 1595 over some kind of violent offense, in 1599 (a Gesualdo copycat?) he murdered his wife when he found her in illicit congress with a lover; he apparently suffered only the most minor consequence, if any, for his actions. Despite yet another flight in disgrace from Mantua in 1501, he didn't permanently leave the service of 'Este until 1505. He must have been an outstanding musician indeed to have been treated so leniently. In 1505, he is found working for Lucrezia Borgia in Ferrara, whom he probably served through 1510, when much of musical retinue was laid off due to the expenses incurred in the war the against Venice. He was then taken under the wing of Cardinal Ippolito I d'Este in Ferrara in 1511. Until 1518, his movements are uncertain, but in that year he rented a house in Venice where he established a music school for gentlewomen. Business was brisk enough to pull him out of debt and pay to have his second wife and children come join him there.

Around this time, just when things looked good, he made what was perhaps his greatest career mistake when he requested a binding patent on the printing of his music. It's not known if this was granted, but it seems it was, for the publication of his music ceases at this date. While it protected his immediate financial interests, it prevented the work from receiving wider circulation (many manuscripts in circulation were pirated) so that his innovative frottolas, the acknowledged best being composed at the time, dropped out of the musical conscience of Italy before he was even dead. ~ Donato Mancini, All Music Guide

 
 
Music Encyclopedia: Bartolomeo Tromboncino

(bin or nr Verona, c1470; d in or nr Venice, c1535). Italian composer. He spent most of his life in the Marquis of Mantua's service, though his career there was stormy (in 1499 he killed his wife after finding her with her lover). He was in Ferrara (1502-8), in Lucrezia Borgia's service, and may have stayed there until 1521, when he was living in Venice. One of the most prolific and gifted frottola composers in the early 16th century, he wrote over 170 in various forms. By 1507 he was setting serious, madrigalian texts, an innovatory step, but his importance waned in later years. His textures tend towards non-imitative polyphony rather than the simple homorhythmic style of many frottolas. His extant sacred works - a motet, a setting of the Lamentations and 17 laude - are basically homorhythmic with contrasting sections of non-imitative polyphony.



 
Wikipedia: Bartolomeo Tromboncino

Bartolomeo Tromboncino (c. 14701535 or later) was an Italian composer of the middle Renaissance. He is mainly famous as a composer of frottola; he is principally infamous for murdering his wife. He was born in Verona and died in or near Venice.

Life

Details of his early life are sketchy, as is common for most composers of the time, but most likely he grew up in Mantua, and he mentions in a letter that he was originally from Verona. Until around 1500 he lived and worked in Mantua, though he made occasional trips to adjacent cities such as Ferrara, Este, Vicenza, Milan, and Pavia, especially when he was in trouble. He fled the city in 1495 for unknown reasons, returning later that same year; in 1499 he murdered his wife when he discovered her in flagrante delicto but, unlike Gesualdo a hundred years later, he may have spared the man (the sources are contradictory on this detail). Curiously, he seems to have been pardoned again and again for his misdeeds, but he left Mantua again "without permission, and for despicable reasons," as stated in a letter from one of the Gonzaga family, his employers. His skill as a composer probably endeared him to Isabella d'Este, one of the great patrons of the arts of the time; this connection may have assisted him in attaining pardons for his various murders and misdemeanors.

From 1502 Tromboncino was employed by the even more infamous Lucrezia Borgia in Ferrara, where he wrote music for the famous intermedi of her opulent court, and most significantly for her wedding to Alfonso d'Este. Sometime before 1521 he moved to Venice, where he most likely spent the remainder of his life, seemingly in rather more placid circumstances.

Music and influence

In spite of his stormy, erratic, and possibly criminal life, much of his music is in the light current form of the frottola, a predecessor to the madrigal. He was a trombonist, as shown by his name, and sometimes employed in that capacity; however he apparently wrote no strictly instrumental music (or none survives). He also wrote some serious sacred music: seventeen laude, a motet and a setting of the Lamentations of Jeremiah. Stylistically, the sacred works are typical of the more conservative music of the early 16th century, using non-imitative polyphony over a cantus firmus, alternating sectionally with more homophonic textures or with unadorned plainsong. His frottolas, by far the largest and most historically significant part of his output (176 in all) are more varied than those of the other famous frottolist, Marchetto Cara, and they also tend to be more polyphonic than is typical for most frottolas of the time; in this way they anticipate the madrigal, the first collections of which began to be published near the very end of Tromboncino's life, and in the city where he lived (for example Verdelot's Primo libro di Madrigali of 1533, published in Venice). The major differences between the late frottolas of Tromboncino and the earliest madrigals were not so much musical as in the structure of the verse they set.

The poetry that Tromboncino set tended to be by the most famous writers of the time; he set Petrarch, Galeotto, Sannazaro, and others; he even set a poem by Michelangelo, Come haro dunque ardire, which was part of a collection Tromboncino published in 1518. Only very few times in European history have artists, poets and composers been so closely associated.

Sources

  • Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. (ISBN 0-393-09530-4)
  • The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. (ISBN 1-56159-174-2)

 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Bartolomeo Tromboncino" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bartolomeo Tromboncino" Read more

Search for answers directly from your browser with the FREE Answers.com Toolbar!  
Click here to download now. 

Get Answers your way! Check out all our free tools and products.

On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

 

Keep Reading

Mentioned In: