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Stefano Landi

  • Born in Rome
  • Died October 28, 1639 in Rome
  • Period: Baroque (1600-1749)
  • Country: Italy

Biography

Stefano Landi was an early-Baroque composer whose large output includes operas, madrigals, arias, masses and other sacred compositions. He was one of the leading Italian composers of his day and the first to write an opera on an historic subject (Il Sant' Alessio).

Landi was born in Rome in 1587, probably in late-January or early-February. He was taken into Rome's Collegio Germanico in 1595 as a boy soprano, and four years later received minor holy orders in the Church. Around this time Stefano was taken under the wing of the powerful Cesi family, whose members included Duke Federico Cesi and his uncle, Cardinal Bartolomeo Cesi. In 1602 they helped arrange Landi's enrollment at the Seminario Romano, where he probably studied under the maestro di cappella there, Agostino Agazzari.

By 1610 Landi was organist at Santa Maria in Trastevere and probably already composing his earliest compositions, though the first published work, a motet, would not appear until 1616. From 1614 until 1617 Landi served as maestro di cappella at Santa Maria della Consolazione in Todi. In about 1618 he moved to Venice, where he composed a collection of 18 madrigals (1619) for his patron, Bishop Marco Cornaro of Padua.

It was in Padua that Landi completed his first opera, La Morte d'Orfeo, in 1619. The following year he returned to Rome, where he worked in the service of Prince Paolo Savelli for about two years. During this time he produced his first volume of arias (1620), a collection regarded much more highly than his earlier madrigals.

In the 1620s and 1630s Landi's career met with many successes, both in his compositions and in the positions he acquired. He had many patrons now, chief among them the Barberini family. In 1624, Pope Urban VIII (a Barberini) assigned him clerical duties at Saint Peter's Basilica and appointed him maestro di cappella at Santa Maria ai Monti, in Rome. For performance of these duties the Pope granted him a permanent cleric's benefice.

Following his elevation to subdeacon in 1629, Landi became a singer at the Sistine Chapel. It was around this time that he was producing many important works, including masses, responsories, and arias. He composed perhaps his most famous, the aforementioned opera Il Sant' Alessio, in 1632. By 1637 Landi's health was in decline, and he died on October 28, 1639.

~ Robert Cummings, All Music Guide

 
 
Music Encyclopedia: Stefano Landi

( b Rome, 1586/7; d there, 28 Oct 1639). Italian composer. He studied at the Collegio Germanico and the Seminario Romano, under Agazzari. By 1618 he was maestro di cappella to the Bishop of Padua, where his first opera, La morte d′Orfeo, was given in1619; the next year he was back in Rome, where he remained, working for a number of churches, the papal choir and the Borghese and Barberini families. It was for the Barberini that his most important work, the sacred opera Sant′Alessio, was written in1631or1632: this was the first opera on a historical topic, the first about a human's inner life and one of the first about a saint. It is notable for its instrumental sinfonias, its use of comic characters, its choral writing, its dances and the expressive use of recitative and also of ensemble. Landi's other works include madrigals, several books of arias, psalms, masses and motets, some in a conservative Roman style.



 
Wikipedia: Stefano Landi
1634 publication of Il Sant'Alessio with woodcut illustration showing a scene from the opera.
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1634 publication of Il Sant'Alessio with woodcut illustration showing a scene from the opera.

Stefano Landi (baptized February 26, 1587October 28, 1639) was an Italian composer and teacher of the early Baroque Roman School. He was an influential early composer of opera, and wrote the earliest opera on a historical subject: Sant'Alessio (1632).

Biography

Landi was born in Rome, the capital of the Papal States.

In 1595 he joined the Collegio Germanico in Rome as a boy soprano, and he may have studied with Asprilio Pacelli. Landi took minor orders in 1599 and began studying at the Seminario Romano in 1602. He is mentioned in the Seminary's records as being the composer and director of a Carnival pastoral in 1607; and in 1611 his name appears as an organist and a singer, though he was already maestro di cappella at S Maria della Consolazione in 1614. Agostino Agazzari was maestro di cappella at the Seminario Romano, and he may have been one of Landi's teachers as well.

In 1618 he had moved to the north of Italy, and published a book of five-voice madrigals at Venice; apparently he had acquired a post as maestro di cappella at Padua. In addition he wrote his first opera in Padua, La morte d'Orfeo. Most likely it was used as part of the festivities for a wedding. His experience in Padua and Venice was essential for developing his style, since there he made contact with the work of the progressive Venetian School composers, whose music was generally avoided in conservative Rome.

In 1620 Landi returned to Rome, where he spent the rest of his life, where his patrons included successively the Borghese family, Cardinal Maurizio of Savoy, and the Barberini family, who were to be his major employers throughout the late 1620s and 1630s, though he joined the papal choir in 1629 on half-salary. It was for the Barberini family that he wrote the work for which he is most famous, Sant'Alessio, in 1632. Throughout this period he was compositionally prolific, writing masses, arias, and responsories, mostly in the seconda pratica style of the early Baroque, a decision which was controversial with some of the more conservative musicians, who thought the prima pratica — the style of Palestrina — more appropriate for sacred music.

After about 1636 he began suffering ill-health, and he died at Rome in 1639 and was buried at Santa Maria in Vallicella.

Music and influence

Curiously, Landi's secular music is more conservative than most of his sacred music, and his first book of madrigals, for five voices and basso continuo, is almost indistinguishable in style from many late 16th century collections, except for the basso continuo part. His other secular music consists of strophic airs, arias, and other songs for voice and basso continuo.

Landi's masses, of which there are only two, are in the simple, 16th century style encouraged (and sometimes demanded) by the Counter-Reformation. However he uses the Venetian concertato style for some of his motets, as well as his Magnificat and Vespers psalm settings, probably as a result of the years he spent in northern Italy.

By far his most famous composition, and one of the most significant operas of the early Baroque, is his setting of the life of fifth-century Saint Alexis, Il Sant'Alessio. Not only is it the first opera to be written on a historical subject, but it carefully describes the inner life of the saint, and attempts psychological characterization of a type new to opera. Most of the interspersed comic scenes, however, are anachronistically (and hilariously) drawn from contemporary life in 17th century Rome.

The part of Sant'Alessio himself is extremely high, and was meant to be sung by a castrato. At the initial performance, half of the singers were from the papal choir, and there were several soprano parts sung by other castrati. The accompanying orchestra is up-to-date, dispensing with the archaic viols and using violins, cellos, harps, lutes, theorbos, and harpsichords. The opera includes introductory canzonas which function as overtures; indeed they are the first overtures in the history of opera. Dances and comic sections mix with serious arias, recitatives, and even a madrigalian lament, for an overall dramatic variety which was extremely effective, as attested by the frequent performances of the opera at the time. Sant'Alessio was one of the first staged dramatic works successfully to mix both the monodic and polyphonic styles.

References and further reading

  • Margaret Murata: "Stefano Landi", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed January 9, 2005), Grove Music Online
  • Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0-393-09745-5
  • The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • Donald Jay Grout, A Short History of Opera. New York, Columbia University Press, 1965. ISBN 0-231-02422-3
  • F. Kennedy, The Musical Tradition at the Roman Seminary During the First Sixty Years (1564-1621), in Bellarmino e la Controriforma, Atti del simposio internazionale di studi, Sora 15-18 October 1986, pp. 629-660

 
 

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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 "Stefano Landi" Read more

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