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Emilio de' Cavalieri

 
Artist: Emilio de' Cavalieri
 
  • Born: 1550
  • Died: March 11, 1602
  • Genres: Classical

Biography

An Italian composer, organist, choreographer, dancer, and voice teacher. Cavalieri composed for the Medici court in Florence (for Ferdinando) and was a contemporary of Caccini and Peri. It is most likely that Cavalieri was the inventor of the "Rappresentatione" which were staged works and antecedents to the opera (likened to theatrical oratorios). The corpus of his musical literature includes the "rappresentatione," a number of madrigals, and lamentations. Cavalieri was also involved in the production of "intermedi" (musical productions performed between the acts and scenes of dramatic presentations) for the wedding of Fernando and Christine of Lorraine. His were the most elaborate intermedi to date and demonstrated his directorial and organizational prowess. It is arguable that the work Cavalieri accomplished with the intermedi helped him to develop the rappresentatione. ~ Keith Johnson, All Music Guide
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Music Encyclopedia: Emilio de′ Cavalieri
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(b Rome, c 1550; d there, 11 March 1602). Italian composer. Born into a noble, artistic family, he worked as organist and coordinator of Lenten music at the Oratorio del Crocifisso in S Marcello, Rome (1578-84). From 1588 he served Ferdinando de′ Medici in Florence as a court overseer and diplomat, supervising and composing music for the famous, lavish intermedi given at Ferdinando's wedding (1589). He returned permanently to Rome in 1600. While in Florence he was, with Peri, Caccini and the poet Rinuccini, in the forefront of developments in dramatic monody. His Rappresentatione di Anima, et di Corpo (1600) was the first play set entirely to music; it includes highly expressive recitative, tuneful solo madrigals, strophic airs and dance-like choruses (the printed score was the first to use a figured bass). He also composed highly original sets of Lamentations and responses for Holy Week (?1599). Four secular dramatic works written for Florence are lost.



 
Wikipedia: Emilio de' Cavalieri
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Emilio de' Cavalieri (c. 1550–March 11, 1602) was an Italian composer, producer, organist, diplomat, choreographer and dancer at the end of the Renaissance era. His work, along with that of other composers active in Rome, Florence and Venice, was critical in defining the beginning of the musical Baroque era. A member of the Roman School of composers, he was an influential early composer of monody, and wrote what is usually considered to be the first oratorio.

Contents

Life

Bust of Emilio de' Cavalieri, Basilica dell'Ara Coeli, Rome

Cavalieri was born in Rome of an aristocratic and musical family. He was the son of Tommaso de' Cavalieri (c. 1509–1587), the close friend of Michelangelo. He probably received his early training there, and was working as an organist and music director in the period from 1578 to 1584. He spent much of his time in Rome as an organiser of lenten oratorios. While in Rome he became associated with Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici.

In 1587, Ferdinando de' Medici succeeded his brother as Grand Duke of Tuscany, and in 1588 he brought Cavalieri to Florence as an overseer of artists, craftsmen and musicians. Cavalieri was master of ceremonies for the extremely opulent intermedi that the Medici family required for events such as weddings. Count Giovanni de' Bardi, the founder and patron of the Florentine Camerata, also collaborated on these productions. In May of 1589, the festivities for the marriage of Grand Duke Ferdinando to Christina of Lorraine included a performance of Girolamo Bargagli's La pellegrina, with six especially elaborate intermedi. The 1st number of the final intermedio (6) was initially a piece by Bardi but was replaced in the actual intermedio by Cavalieri's virtuosic number based on the Aria del Gran Duca which became popular all over Europe and occurs in many arrangements and variations such as made by Peter Philips in Antwerp. Cavalieri may have gotten some of his ideas for monody directly from Bardi, since Cavalieri was not a member of the Camerata during its period of activity a few years earlier. He may have developed his rivalry with Giulio Caccini, another extremely important and influential early monodist during this period.

In the 1590s, while still in Florence, Cavalieri produced several pastorales (a semi-dramatic predecessor to opera, set in the country, with shepherds and shepherdesses as common characters). In addition to his musical activities, he was employed as a diplomat during this time, assisting in papal politics, including buying the votes of key cardinals for the elections of popes Innocent IX and Clement VIII who were expected to favour the Medici.

During the 1590s he made frequent diplomatic trips to Rome, remaining active in the musical life there. He premiered his famous Rappresentatione di Anima, et di Corpo... in February 1600; this piece is generally held to be the first oratorio. According to Roman records the piece was produced twice that year at the Oratorio de Filippini adjacent to Santa Maria in Vallicella, and was witnessed by 35 cardinals.

In 1600 Cavalieri produced Euridice, one of the first operas, by Jacopo Peri (libretto by Ottavio Rinuccini); this was part of an elaborate set of festivities for the wedding of Henry IV of France and Maria de' Medici. Unfortunately for Cavalieri, he was not given control of the main event, the production of Il rapimento di Cefalo—his rival Giulio Caccini took over from him—and he left Florence in anger, never to return.

Works

Cavalieri claimed to be the inventor of the stile rappresentativo, what is now usually known as monody, and he made the claim with considerable irritation: "everyone knows I am the inventor of [this style]," he said in a letter of 1600, "and I said so myself in print."[1] Caccini seems to have gotten more of the credit, perhaps deservedly so, because of his early association with Bardi and Vincenzo Galilei in the 1570s in Florence, where the style was first discussed and probably invented. Comparing himself to Caccini, he said of their two styles: "[my] music moves people to pleasure and sadness, while theirs [i.e. Caccini's and Peri's] moves them to boredom and disgust."

Among Cavalieri's secular compositions were madrigals, monodies, and pieces he wrote for intermedi; his sacred compositions included a setting of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, and the Rappresentatione di Anima, et di Corpo. This work, probably the most historically important composition of Cavalieri to survive, consists of alternating speech, strophic songs, recitative-like sections and madrigalian parts; subsequent oratorios often used it as a starting-point. It is the first work to be published with a figured bass. Most importantly, however, it was an attempt to demonstrate, at musically conservative Rome, that the modern monodic style was consistent with the aims of the Counter-Reformation and could be adapted to a religious as opposed to a secular purpose. The quick adoption of the modern musical style by other Roman composers attests to its effectiveness in this regard. Cavalieri was followed by other Roman School composers of the 17th century which included Domenico Mazzocchi, Giacomo Carissimi and Alessandro Scarlatti.

Most of his music is in the most advanced style of the time. His four-part vocal music usually has a highly ornamented and expressive melodic line; the differentiation of the melodic line from the others is one of the defining features of the early Baroque. Sometimes he experimented with enharmonic chromaticism which required microtonal tunings; apparently he built a special pipe organ in the 1590s for playing this kind of music.

Sources

Primary (paratextual material)

  • Cavalieri, Emilio de' (1994). Tim Carter and Zygmunt Szweykowski. ed. Composing Opera: From Dafne to Ulisse Errante. Practica Musica, vol. 2. trans. Tim Carter. Kraków: Musica Iagellonica. ISBN 837099010X. 
(English translations of prefaces to 17th century Italian operas by Cavalieri, Caccini, Peri, Rinuccini, and others. Includes Italian originals.)

Secondary or tertiary

  • Goldschmidt, Hugo (1901). Studien zur Geschichte der italienischen Oper im 17. Jahrhundert, vol. 1. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel. 
  • Bukofzer, Manfred (1947). Music in the Baroque Era. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.. ISBN 0-393-09745-5. 
  • Dent, Edward J.; Sternfeld, F.W. (1968). "ch. XIV Music and Drama". in Gerald Abraham. The New Oxford History of Music, vol. IV The Age of Humanism. London: Oxford University Press. 
  • Fortune, Nigel (1980). "Monody". in Stanley Sadie. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan. ISBN 1-56159-174-2. 
  • Hitchcock, H. Wiley (1980). "Caccini, Giulio". in Stanley Sadie. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan. ISBN 1-56159-174-2. 
  • Palisca, Claude (1980). "Cavalieri, Emilio de'". in Stanley Sadie. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan. ISBN 1-56159-174-2. 
  • Grout,, Donald Jay (1988). A Short History of Opera (Third Edition ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-06192-7. 
  • The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, (MacMillan,1992). entries under Cavalieri, Peri, and Rappresentatione.
  • Kirkendale, Warren (January 2001). Emilio De' Cavalieri "Gentiluomo Romano". Florence: L.S. Olschki. ISBN 88-222-4949-0. 
  • Claude V. Palisca: "Emilio de' Cavalieri", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed November 17, 2005), (subscription access)

Notes

  1. ^ Palisca, Grove (1980)

External links



 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 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
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