Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Giovanni Legrenzi

 

( b Clusone, bap. 12 Aug 1626; d Venice, 27 May 1690). Italian composer. An organist, he served at S Maria Maggiore, Bergamo, from 1645, later becoming a chaplain there and in 1653 first organist. In 1656-65 he was maestro di cappella of the Accademia dello Santo Spirito at Ferrara. Later he unsuccessfully sought various posts and refused others (one of them at the French court). Moving to Venice, he worked at the Conservatorio dei Mendicanti, probably from 1671, and was its maestro di coro by 1683. Finally he gained distinction at St Mark's, as vice-maestro di cappella from 1681 and maestro from 1685; the musical forces there attained their largest recorded size in these years.

One of the most gifted and influential composers of his time, Legrenzi was a major force in the development of the late Baroque style. His music owes much to Cazzati, Merula and others, but is dominated by a stronger tonal sense. His fugal writing is especially notable. His most forward-looking works are his c100 ensemble sonatas (for strings and continuo), which influenced the sonatas and concertos of Torelli, Vivaldi and Bach; he also composed instrumental dances. In his operas (six of his 19 survive complete), arias have a growing importance and display a variety of forms. Among his other vocal works are solo cantatas, seven oratorios and much sacred music, ranging from small motets to massive polychoral settings. His aria style strongly influenced Alessandro Scarlatti and Handel.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
  • Genres: Opera

Biography

As in the worlds of literature, technology, and business, often the most inventive musical pioneers are overshadowed by their successors. This is certainly the case with Legrenzi, whose name is known to relatively few but whose musical influence is almost impossible to overestimate. His pupils included Vivaldi and possibly Caldara, he was a major influence on Alessandro Scarlatti, and his sonatas formed the basis for what was to become the modern format, marked by clear distinctions between the movements and specific tempo indications giving performers more direction and less discretion. He mastered both the trio sonata (sonata a tre) as well as the sonata a due (sonata for two instruments). Typically, the bass is the background for the other instruments, though in many of the sonatas a due, the violin and bass take almost equal roles. These sonatas often featured fugues with carefully crafted sequences and deft changes of theme from tonic to dominant, features that were to become hallmarks of the modern sonata. His cantatas, too, were seminal, with a particularly strong influence on the works of Alessandro Scarlatti. They are also masterly in their use of themes and figures, and show a wide freedom of structure in the disposition of recitative, arioso, and aria passages. Like many of his contemporaries, he excelled in vocal music as well as instrumental, and composed many operas as well as cantatas, though few have remained in the repertoire. He came from a musical family and first studied music with his father. In 1645, he took the position of organist at Santa Maria Maggiore in Bergamo, near Clusone. Like many composers, he entered the priesthood, in 1651. He left Bergamo for the more musically prestigious court of Ferrara, where he was named to the position of maestro di cappella at the Accademia dello Santo Spirito, a position he held from 1657 until 1664. He enjoyed great success as both composer and choir master. He left Ferrara at some point in 1665 and little is known about the positions he held or even where he lived until 1670, when he became the maestro di coro at the Ospedale dei Derelitti. (Literally named hospitals, "ospedale" were more a cross between boarding homes and conservatories, which specialized, as the names suggest, in the education of orphaned or abandoned girls. Many prominent composers were very closely affiliated with these, most famously, Vivaldi and the Pieta.) In 1671, he also took the post of maestro di cappella at the oratory of the Congregazione dei Filippini. In 1681, Legrenzi became vice maestro di cappella at San Marco, succeeding Antonio Sartorio in that position, and in 1683, he became maestro di coro at the Ospedale dei Mendicanti. His most prolific years of opera composition began in 1681, during which he produced at least two major works a year. In 1685, he was promoted to maestro di cappella at San Marco and with this promotion, returned the majority of his attention to sacred music. ~ Anne Feeney, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Giovanni Legrenzi

Top
Anonymous 18th century portrait of Giovanni Legrenzi, Civico museo bibliografico musicale, Bologna

Giovanni Legrenzi (baptized August 12, 1626 – May 27, 1690) was an Italian composer of opera, vocal and instrumental music, and organist, of the Baroque era. He was one of the most prominent composers in Venice in the late 17th century, and extremely influential on the development of late Baroque idioms across northern Italy.

Contents

Life

Legrenzi was born at Clusone, near Bergamo, then part of the Republic of Venice. His father, Giovanni Maria Legrenzi, was a professional violinist and, to some extent, a composer. We know Legrenzi had two brothers and two sisters, though one of the brothers, Marco, apparently a talented musician who performed with his father and brother in the 1660s, is not mentioned in Legrenzi’s will: it is presumed that he died young. His remaining brother and sisters are both mentioned in his will. Legrenzi was probably taught largely at home, and his performance skills developed at the local church, and it can also be assumed there was music-making in the house.

Legrenzi received his first appointment in Bergamo, as Organist at Santa Maria Maggiore, a magnificent church with a celebrated musical history. Following ordination as a priest in 1651, he was appointed as a resident chaplain at the church, though he continued to be actively involved in the music, and was given the title of First Organist in 1653, at about the time Maurizio Cazzati was appointed maestro di cappella. Legrenzi’s first publication, music for Mass and Vespers, appeared in 1654. His appointment as organist was not reconfirmed at the end of the year owing to his apparent involvement in a minor gambling scandal, though he was reinstated by mid February 1655.

Legrenzi resigned from his position at Bergamo towards the end of 1655, and in 1656 became maestro di cappella at the Academy of the Holy Spirit in Ferrara. The Academy was not a learned society, but a fraternity of laymen which presented predominantly liturgical services with music. It had a small but very good musical establishment with an impressive tradition, and effectively addressed the needs of the whole aristocratic community of Ferrara, with whom Legrenzi cemented relationships that, like those he had already established in Bergamo, would serve him well throughout his life. The position at the Academy of the Holy Spirit would have left Legrenzi with ample time for other pursuits. By the early 1660s he had already published eight volumes, and had broken in to the elite world of opera, gaining his first performances in Venice in 1664.

We know little of certainty about Legrenzi’s activities between approximately 1665 and 1670, a situation considerably exacerbated by the destruction of local records for the period during World War II. He ended his association with the Academy of the Holy Spirit at some point, and does not appear to have had a permanent position of any sort for several years, though it is unlikely that he was in financial difficulty. He had land at Clusone and the proceeds from his publications, several of which had already gone into second editions, as well as performance fees. He also published his largest volume, the huge collection for double choir, during this period.

Legrenzi seems to have been well settled in Venice by 1670. He took a position as a music teacher at Santa Maria dei Derelitti (commonly called the Ospedaletto), remaining until 1676, and was busy with further publications, musical commissions, especially oratorios, occasional performances, and more.

In 1676 he was a finalist for appointment as maestro at San Marco in succession to Cavalli, losing by a single vote to Natale Monferrato. Later in the year he became maestro di coro of the Ospedale dei Mendicanti, where he remained until 1682 when he succeeded Antonio Sartorio as vice-maestro at San Marco. He was by this time (along with Carlo Pallavicino) the leading opera composer of his day, with ten commissions in the five years to 1685.

Legrenzi succeeded Monferrato as maestro di cappella at San Marco in April 1685. He was by this time probably in failing health, and the last few years of his life were clouded by sickness. He took little part in the services at San Marco from the later part of 1687, where performances were increasingly in the hands of his vice-maestro, Gian Domenico Partenio. Legrenzi’s death on 27 May 1690 from the "mal di petra" (a colic-related illness, probably kindey-stones) was accompanied by excruciating pain.

Legrenzi’s legacy lived on for some years after his death. His great-nephew Giovanni Varischino inherited his music and books, and produced three posthumous publications.

Music

Legrenzi was active in most of the genres current in northern Italy in the late 17th century, including sacred vocal music, opera, oratorio, and varieties of instrumental music. Though best known as a composer of instrumental sonatas, he was predominantly a composer of liturgical music with a distinctly dramatic character. The bulk of his instrumental music may also be included in this category, since it would have been used primarily as a substitute for liturgical items at Mass or Vespers. His operas were immensely popular (and extravagantly presented) in their day, though like his oratorios, few have survived. His later dance music was certainly connected with the operatic repertoire, though the function of an early collection (Op. 4, which is musicologically famous for its inclusion of six pieces designated sonate da camera) is less clear.

Published works

  • Concerti Musicali per uso di Chiesa. Op. 1 (Venice, Alessandro Vincenti, 1654)
  • Sonata a due, e tre. Op. 2 (Venice, Francesco Magni, 1655)
  • Harmonia d'affetti Devoti a due, tre, e quatro, voci. Op. 3 (Venice, Alessandro Vincenti, 1655)
  • Sonate dà Chiesa, e dà Camera, Correnti, Balletti, Alemane, Sarabande a tre, doi violini, e violone. Libro Secondo. Op. 4 (Venice, Francesco Magni, 1656)
  • Salmi a cinque, tre voci, e due violini. Op. 5 (Venice, Francesco Magni, 1657)
  • Sentimenti Devoti Espressi con le musica di due, e tre voci. Libro Secondo. Op. 6 (Venice, Francesco Magni detto Gardano, 1660). A second edition was published in Antwerp in 1665.
  • Compiete con le Lettanie & Antifone Della B.V. a 5. voci. Op. 7 (Venice, Francesco Magni detto Gardano, 1662)
  • Sonate a due, tre, cinque, a sei stromenti. Libro 3. Op. 8 (Venice, Francesco Magni, 1663)
  • Sacri e Festivi Concerti. Messa e Salmi a due chori con stromenti a beneplacito. Op. 9 (Venice, Francesco Magni Gardano, 1667)
  • Acclamationi Divote a voce sola. Libro Primo. Op. 10 (Bologna, Giacomo Monti, 1670)
  • La Cetra. Libro Quarto di Sonate a due tre e quattro stromenti. Op. 10 (Venice, Francesco Magni Gardano, 1673, reprinted 1682)
  • Cantate, e Canzonette a voce sola. Op. 12 (Bologna, Giacomo Monti, 1676)
  • Idee Armoniche Estese per due e tre voci. Op. 13 (Venice, Francesco Magni detto Gardano, 1678)
  • Echi di Riverenza di Cantate, e Canzoni. Libro Secondo. Op. 14 (Bologna, Giacomo Monti, 1678)
  • Sacri Musicali Concerti a due, e tre voci. Libro Terzo. Op. 15 (Venice, Gioseppe Salla, 1689)
  • Balletti e Correnti a cinque stromenti, con il basso continuo per il cembalo. Libro Quinto Postumo. Op. 16 (Venice, Giuseppe Sala, 1691)
  • Motetti Sacri a voce sola con tre strumenti. Op. 17 (Venice, Gioseppe Sala, 1692)

Note: Two collections were published as opus 10, Acclamationi Divote (1670) and La Cetra (1673). In the copy of Acclamationi Divote at the Civico museo bibliografico musicale in Bologna, the numeral ‘i’ has been added to the opus number in red ink, indicating an awareness that there are two books published as opus 10. References throughout this article refer to works from this volume as Op. 11.

Unpublished works

A number of works survive in manuscript copies only. Most can be ascribed confidently to Legrenzi, though there are a few of less certain attribution. Among the most important of these works are:

  • The Messa a cinque voci con stromenti, found at Oxford.
  • The unaccompanied Missa quinque vocibus found at Loreto. This Mass, dated 1689 and surviving in a magnificently bound volume, may have been presented as a votive offering.
  • The Messa a 16 for four choirs and organ continuo held in the Vatican Library.
  • The Prosa pro mortuis, a complete setting for double choir and instruments of the sequence "Dies irae" from the Requiem Mass.
  • A unique setting for double choir and instruments of Matins for Christmas Day, including the Invitatory, Psalms and Te Deum; and concluding with the Introit for the First Mass of Christmas.
  • Intret in conspectu, a motet for 6 voices, known from a single source copied out by Handel, who drew on Legrenzi’s motet in the chorus 'To thy dark servant' in the oratorio Samson.
  • Credidi propter quod locutus sum, a psalm setting for solo alto, strings and continuo, which appears likely to be a unique example of Legrenzi's own hand, as there is evidence that it is an autograph.
  • Laudate pueri, a psalm setting for five voices, strings and continuo and, unusually, a trumpet.
  • Spirate aure serenae, a motet for solo soprano, strings and continuo which provides for a theorboe to double or replace the violone.

There are in addition a few more liturgical pieces, a number of cantatas and the unusual 'serenata' Notte, madri d’horrori.

Operas

  • Nino, il giusto (1662)
  • L'achille in Sciro (1663)
  • Zenobia e Radamisto † (1665)
  • Tiridate (1668)
  • Eteocle e Polinice † (1674)
  • La divisione del mondo † (1675)
  • Adone in Cipro ‡ (1675)
  • Germanico sul Reno † (1676)
  • Totila † (1677)
  • Il Creso ‡ (1681)
  • Pausania (1681)
  • Antioco il grande ‡ (1682)
  • Lisimaco riamato da Alexandro ‡ (1682)
  • Ottaviano Cesare Agusto (1682)
  • I due Cesari ‡ (1682)
  • Giustino † (1683)
  • L'anarchia dell'imperio ‡ (1683)
  • Publio Elio Pertinance ‡ (1684)
  • Ifianassa e Melampo (1685)

† Surviving scores.
‡ Arias from these operas survive in one or more sources.

Oratorios

  • Oratorio del giuditio (1665)
  • Oratorio della passione (1671)
  • Sedecia † (1671)
  • Il creation del mondo (1672)
  • Sisara (1672)
  • Moisè (1672)
  • La vendita del cuor humano † (or Il prezzo del cuor humano) ‡ (1673)
  • La morte del cor penitente † (1673)
  • San Giovanni Battista (1673)
  • Adamo et Eva (1674)
  • Gli sponsali d’Ester (1675)
  • Decollatione di S. Giovanni (1678)
  • Erodiade (lib. Neri) (1687)
  • Erodiade (lib. Piccioli) (1687)

† Surviving scores.
‡ Whether or not La vendita del cuor humano is in fact a Legrenzi work or P.A. Ziani's Il cuore humano all'incanto remains to be demonstrated.

References

  • Stephen Bonta: The Church Sonatas of Giovanni Legrenzi. Ph.D. Dissertation, Harvard University, 1964.
  • Stephen Bonta: "Giovanni Legrenzi", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed June 27, 2005), (subscription access)
  • Stephen Bonta: Studies in Italian Sacred and Instrumental Music in the 17th Century. Burlington, Ashgate Publishing Co, 2003. ISBN 0860788784
  • Rudolf Bossard: Giovanni Legrenzi -- Il Giustino: Eine Monograph; Studie. Ph.D. Dissertation, Basel, 1987. Published as Il Giustino; eine mongraphische Studie. Baden-Baden, Koerner, 1988. Collection d'études musicologiques ; 79. ISBN 3873205793
  • Tiziana Brugnoni: Giovanni Legrenzi, Germanico sul Reno: Studio introduttivo ed edizione critica. M.A. Dissertation, Università di Pavia, 1991.
  • L. Glenn Cockerham: The chamber sonatas and dances of Giovanni Legrenzi. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Kansas, 1988.
  • Julia Davids: Music for Vespers of the B.V.M. by Giovanni Legrenzi: A modern performing edition. D.Mus. Dissertation, Northwestern University, 2006.
  • Reinmar Emans: Die einstimmigen Kantaten, Canzonetten und Serenaden Giovanni Legrenzis. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Bonn, 1984
  • Piero Fogaccia: Giovanni Legrenzi. Bergamo, Edizioni Orobiche, 1954.
  • John Alexander MacDonald: The sacred vocal music of Giovanni Legrenzi. 2 vols. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Michigan, 1964.
  • Paola Palermo and Giulia Pecis Cavagna: La cappella musicale di Santa Maria Maggiore a Bergamo dal 1637 al 1810. (Studi Sulla Storia Della Musica in Lombardia, v). Turnhout, Brepols, 2007. ISBN 2503510337.
  • Francesco Passadore and Franco Rossi: La sottigliezza dell’intendimento. Catalogo tematico di Giovanni Legrenzi. Venice: Edizioni Fondazione Levi, 2002. ISBN 8875520283
  • Francesco Passadore and Franco Rossi (eds.): Giovanni Legrenzi e la Cappella ducale di San Marco : atti dei convegni internazionali di studi, Venezia, 24-26 maggio 1990, Clusone, 14-16 settembre 1990. Florence : Olschki, 1994. ISBN 8822241649
  • Gale Richard Price: "II sedecia" A seventeenth-century oratorio by Giovanni Legrenzi. D.M.A. Dissertation, University of Kentucky, 1981
  • John H. Roberts (ed.): La lotta d’Hercole con Acheloo / Agostino Steffani. Miscellaneous manuscript sources. Handel sources: materials for the study of Handel's borrowing ; 9. New York: Garland, 1986. ISBN 0824064836 ISBN 978-0824064839 (motet Intret in conspectu)
  • Eleanor Selfridge-Field: A New Chronology of Venetian Opera and Related Genres, 1660–1760. Palo Alto, Stanford University Press, 2007. ISBN 9780804744379
  • Eleanor Selfridge-Field: Pallade veneta : writings on music in Venetian society, 1650-1750. Venezia : Fondazione Levi, 1985. ISBN 8875520062
  • Eleanor Selfridge-Field: Venetian Instrumental Music, from Gabrieli to Vivaldi. New York, Dover Publications, Third Rev. Ed. 1994. ISBN 0486281515 (See also Venetian instrumental ensemble music in the seventeenth century. D.Phil. Dissertation, University of Oxford, 1969.)
  • Umberto Scarpetta: Ritratto di un musicista barocco: Giovanni Legrenzi. Ph.D. Dissertation, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 1976.
  • Hendrik Schulze: Die Figur des Odysseus in der venezianischen Oper des 17. Jahrhunderts. Ph.D. Dissertation, Heidelberg, 2002. Published as Odysseus in Venedig: Sujetwahl und Rollenkonzeption in der venezianischen Oper des 17. Jahrhunderts. Frankfurt: peter Lang, 2004. ISBN 3631504950.
  • J. David Swale: A thematic catalogue of the music of Giovanni Legrenzi (with an introduction and commentaries). 3 vols. Ph.D. Dissertation, The University of Adelaide, 1984.
  • Karin Anna Swanson: The secular vocal chamber music of Giovanni Legrenzi: M.Mus. Dissertation, University of Illinois, 1964.

Facsimiles

  • Acclamationi divote a voce sola. Bibliotheca musica Bononiensis. Sezione IV 207 : Bologna, Forni 1980.
  • Cantatas by Antonio Cesti and Giovanni Legrenzi ; selected and introduced by David Burrows and Stephen Bonta. The Italian cantata in the seventeenth century ; vol.6. New York : Garland, 1986. ISBN 0824088808. (Nos.1 - 12 from Opus 14, and three manuscript works.)
  • Echi di riverenza : di cantate e canzoni. Archivum musicum. Cantata barocca ; 7. Firenze : Studio per edizioni scelte, 1980. ISBN 9788872426852.
  • Il Giustino : melodramma in tre atti. Collezione settecentesca Bettarini ; no. 12. Milano : Casa editrice Nazionalmusic, c. 1980.
  • La Cetra. Monumenta Lombarda, Libri Antiqui Fototypice Expressi, 2. Bologna, 1970.

King’s Music (now distributed through The Early Music Company[1]) produces good quality photocopies of the complete collections Sonate a due, tre, cinque, a sei stromenti (Op. 8, 1663), Idee Armoniche Estese (Op. 13, 1678) and Balletti e Correnti (Op. 16, 1691).

Editions

  • Alessandro Bares, Pietro Zazzetta (ed.), La Cetra. Musedita, Albese con Cassano, 2000. (The whole of La Cetra, Opus 11(10).)
  • Alessandro Bares (ed.), Sonate a due, e tre. Musedita, Albese con Cassano, 2006. (The whole of Opus 2.)
  • Alessandro Bares (ed.), Sonate a due, trè, cinque, e sei Stromenti. Musedita, Albese con Cassano, 2004. (The whole of Opus 8.)
  • Stephen Bonta (ed.): The instrumental music of Giovanni Legrenzi : sonate a due e tre, opus 2, 1655. Harvard Publications in Music, 14. Harvard University Press, 1984. ISBN 0674456203.
  • Stephen Bonta (ed.): La Cetra : sonate a due, tre e quattro stromenti, libro quattro, opus 10, 1673. Harvard Publications in Music, 17. Harvard University Press, 1992. ISBN 0674456211.
  • Howard Mayer Brown: Italian opera librettos : 1640-1770. Italian opera, 1640-1770 v. 60. New York : Garland, 1979. ISBN 0824026594.
  • Howard Mayer Brown: Totila. Italian opera, 1640-1770 v. 9. New York : Garland, 1978. ISBN 082402608X.
  • Julia de Clerck: Prosa pro mortuis (Dies irae), Musicologica neolovaniensia ; musica sacra 1. Louvain-la-Neuve : Institut supérieur d’archéologie et d’histoire de l’art, 1981.
  • Stefano Faglia, Franca Saini (ed.): Eteocle e Polinice. Opera in 3 Atti. Venezia 1675. Monza, IAMR, 2003. Parma, L'oca del Cairo Edizioni Musicali, 2003.
  • Stefano Faglia, Franca Saini (ed.): Giustino. Opera in 3 atti. Venezia 1683. Monza, IAMR, 2006. Parma, L'oca del Cairo Edizioni Musicali, 2006.
  • Joyce Johnson (ed.): Giovanni Legrenzi 1629-1690 II Sedecia / Bernardo Pasquini 1637-1710 Sant'Agnese. The Italian oratorio, 1650–1800 ; 8. New York, Garland, 1986. ISBN 0824077075.
  • Jeffrey Kurtzman (ed.): Vesper and Compline Music for Three Principal Voices. Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music ; 13. New York, Garland, 1998. ISBN 0815323603. (Confitebor tibi from Opus 1)
  • Jeffrey Kurtzman (ed.): Vesper and Compline Music for Four Principal Voices. Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music ; 14. New York: Garland, 1998. ISBN 0815324200. (Dixit Dominus from Opus 1)
  • Jeffrey Kurtzman (ed.): Vesper and Compline Music for Five Principal Voices, Parts I-II. Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music ; 15-16. New York: Garland, 1999-2000. ISBN 0815324219 (I) ISBN 0815324227 (II). (Laudate Dominum from Opus 1, in Volume 16)
  • Jeffrey Kurtzman (ed.): Vesper and Compline Music for Eight Principal Voices, Part One-Two. Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music ; 18-19. New York: Garland, c.2001-2002. ISBN 0815324243 (I) ISBN 0815324251 (II). (In exitu Israel from Opus 9, in Volume 19)
  • Anne Schnoebelen (ed.): Masses by Maurizio Cazzati, Giovanni Antonio Grossi, Giovanni Legrenzi. Seventeenth-Century Italian Sacred Music; 7. New York : Garland, 1997. ISBN 0815324138. (The Mass from Opus 9)
  • Albert Seay (ed.): Cantatas and Canzonets for Solo voice, Part I: Music for alto and bass voices ; Part II: Music for soprano or tenor voice. Recent Researches in the music of the Baroque era, 14, 15 : Madison, A-R Editions, 1972. (The whole of Opus 12.)
  • Albert Seay (ed.): Sonate da camera : opus 4, for two violins and basso continuo, Oxford University Press, c.1979. (Nos. 7-30 from Opus 4) ISBN 9780193576209.
  • Albert Seay (ed.): Sonate da chiesa, opus 4 [and] opus 8 (1656-1663). Le Pupitre, collection de music ancienne publiée sous la direction de François Lesure, 4. Paris : Heugel, 1968. (Nos. 1-6 from Opus 4)

Prima la musica! produce Urtext performing editions of chamber and sacred music from several of Legrenzi's printed collections.

King’s Music (see "Facsimiles" above) produces facsimile or Urtext performing editions of a number of individual works.

Recordings

Major recordings dedicated to Legrenzi include:

  • Acclamationi Divote; Echi di Riverenza. Cappella Mauriziana; dir. Mario Valsecchi. Antes BM-CD 91.1016. [Motets from Acclamationi Divote, Op. 10 (1670): Angelorum ad convivia, Op. 10/1; Durum cor, Op. 10/3; En homo quae pro te, Op. 10/9; Plaudite vocibus, Op. 10/10; Cantatas from Echi di Riverenza, Op. 14 (1678): Catene scioglietimi, Op. 14/1; A pie d’un fonte, Op. 14/3; A battaglia, Op. 14/6.]
  • Concerti musicali per uso di Chiesa, Op. 1. Oficina Musicum, Riccardo Favero, Dynamic, CDS 653. [The whole of Op. 1, both Mass and Vespers “of a Confessor” including proper antiphons. Also including two sonatas, La Bevilacqua Op. 8/6 and La Mosta, Op. 8/3.]
  • Dies Irae - Sonate a quattro viole - Motetti. Ricercar Consort, dir. Philippe Pierlot. Ricercar RIC 236. 2001. [Prosa pro mortuis. Dies irae; La Cetra, Op. 11/17, Op. 11/18; Motets Angelorum ad convivia Op. 10/1 and Suspiro Domine Op. 10/11]
  • Il Cuor umano all’incanto (1673). Ensemble Legrenzi. TACTUS TC 621201, 2003 [The oratorio La vendita del cuor umano] (This recording is also available on Oratorios of the Italian Baroque. Ensemble Legrenzi and Complesso Pro Musica Firenze. Brilliant Classics 93354, 2007. Includes Carissimi’s Oratorio della SS Vergine and Jonas.)
  • La Cetra. Ensemble Baroque de Nice, dir. Gilbert Bezzina. Ligia LIG 030110902, (2003) [Op. 2: La Cornara, Op. 2/1, La Spilimberga, Op. 2/2, La Donata, Op. 2/7, La Foscari, Op. 2/8, La Torriana, Op. 2/15; La Cetra: Op. 11/3, 4, 9, 13, 14, 15 and 16.]
  • La Morte del Cor Penitente. Cecchetti; Invernizzi; Nmircovich; Sonatori De La Gioiosa Marca. Divox 79504. 1996 [The oratorio La Morte del Cor Penitente]
  • La vendita del core : oratorio en duex parties. Roger Blanchard (cond.). Paris, Les Discophiles Français DF 730.057. 1962. [This recording is available for downloading at www.dismarc.org.]
  • Missa Opus 1 - Sonate d’église. Ensemble Olivier Opdebeeck Cori Spezzati, dir. Olivier Opdebeek. Pierre Verany PV700033. 2005. (Op. 1: Kyrie, Gloria, Credo; Op. 4 Sonatas La Benaglia Op. 4/3, La Tassa Op. 4/4; Op. 3 motet Adoramus te Op. 3/14.]
  • O dilectissime Jesu. Motetti e Sonate. Monika Mauch (sop.), Les Cornets Noirs. ORF CD 355. 2003. [Op. 8 Sonatas: La Pia Op. 8/2, La Rosetta Op. 8/5, La Boiarda Op. 8/8, La Squarzona Op. 8/9, La Cremona Op. 8/10, La Buscha Op. 8/13; La Cetra: Sonata sesta Op. 11/12, Sonata prima Op. 11/13; Op. 17 Motets: O dilectissime Jesu Op. 17/1, O vos delitiarum cultores Op. 17/2, Coronemus non rosis Op. 17/3, Omnes gentes Op. 17/4.]
  • Trio Sonatas 1655. Parnassi Musici. cpo 777 030-2. 2004. [The whole of Opus 2]
  • Sonate e Balletti per strumenti ad arco. Sonatori de la Gioiosa Marca. Rivo Alto CRR9014, 1991. [Op. 8 Sonatas: La Basadona Op. 8/14; La Cremona Op.8/10; La Crispa, Op. 8/16; La Cetra, Op. 11: Sonata quinta, Op. 11/11; Sonata sesta, Op. 11/12; Sonata prima, Op. 11/13, Sonata sesta “o come piace” Op. 11/18; Opus 16 (1691): Balletto terzo, Op. 16/5, Corrente terza, Op. 16/6; Corrente nona, Op. 16/18.]
  • Sonate e Motetti. Musica Antiqua Praha; Pavel Klikar. Supraphon 3185-2 931. [Op. 8 Sonatas: La Rossetta Op. 8/5, La Squarzona Op. 8/9, La Cremona Op. 8/10, La Marinona Op. 8/12; La Cetra, Op. 11: Sonata prima Op. 11/1. Harmonia d’Affetti Devoti, Op. 3: Hodie colletantur Op. 3/1; Humili voce Op. 3/6; Motetti Sacri, Op. 17: O dilectissime Jesu Op. 17/1; O vos qui inter Op. 17/2; Non susurrate Op. 17/9; Omnes gentes Op. 17/4.]
  • Venice Before Vivaldi – A Portrait of Giovanni Legrenzi. El Mundo; Richard Savino. Koch International KIC 7446. [Opus 2: Sonatas La Foscari Op. 2/8, La Zabarella Op. 2/10, La Donata Op. 2/7 La Cornara Op.2/1, La Spilimberga Op. 2/2; Opus 4: La Benaglia Op. 4/3 La Forni Op. 4/11; La Cetra Op. 11: Op. 11/2, Op. 11/6, Op. 11/7; Motetti Sacri, Op. 17: O dilectissime Jesu Op. 17/1, O mirandum mysterium Op. 17/7]
  • Vesperae, Op. 1. Cori Spezzati, dir. Olivier Opdebeeck. Pierre Verany. [The whole of the Vespers music from Op. 1; Op. 4 Sonatas: La Pezzoli Op. 4/6; Op. 3 Motets: Obstupescite Op. 3/13.]

Approximately 40 other recordings are available featuring one or more Legrenzi works. By far the most frequently recorded item is Che fiero costume from the opera Eteocle e Polinice (in a 1680 revival, having originally appeared in 1678 in Echi di Riverenza Op. 14), made famous by opera singers including bass Ezio Pinza and tenor Luciano Pavarotti. Sonatas from all of the four volumes in this form are generously represented, with a complete recording of Op. 2 (1655) and most sonatas from the other volumes also available. The sonata for 4 violins from La Cetra, Op. 11/13, and the two unusual sonatas for 4 viola gamba, Op. 11/17 and Op. 11/18, appear on a number of recordings in various transpositions. Most other genres remain under-represented, notably including the surviving operas.

External links

References

  1. ^ Andrew Green, "King's Music bankrupted in fraud case" in Early Music Today, October/November 2009, p.4

 
 
Related topics:
Eteocle E Polinice, opera (Classical Work)
Antonio Vivaldi (Italian composer)
Fugue on a theme by Legrenzi, for organ in C minor, BWV 574 (BC J63) (Classical Work)

Related answers:
Where is Giovanni in soulsilver? Read answer...
Who is Giovanni Cabota? Read answer...
Who is Giovanni in Pokémon? Read answer...

Help us answer these:
Where did Giovanni die?
Where did Giovanni explore?
Who is Giovanni valentino?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Oxford Grove Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
AMG AllMusic Guide to Classical Music . Copyright © 2012 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Giovanni Legrenzi Read more

Follow us
Facebook Twitter
YouTube

Mentioned in

» More» More