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Giulio Caccini

 
Giulio Caccini

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Giulio Caccini



 
 
Giulio Caccini (8 October 1551 – 10 December 1618) was an Italian
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
 composer, teacher, singer, instrumentalist and writer of the very late Renaissance
Renaissance music

Renaissance music is European music written during the Renaissance, approximately 1400 - 1600. Dates of classical music eras, given the lack of abrupt shifts in musical thinking during the 15th century....
 and early Baroque
Baroque music

Baroque music describes a period or style of European classical music approximately extending from Dates of classical music eras. This era is said to begin in music after the Renaissance music and was followed by the Classical music era....
 eras. He was one of the founders of the genre of opera
Opera

Opera is an Performing arts in which singers and musicians perform a dramatic work which combines a text and a musical score. Opera is part of the Western classical music tradition....
, and one of the single most influential creators of the new Baroque style.






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Caccini   Le Nuove Musiche
Giulio Caccini (8 October 1551 – 10 December 1618) was an Italian
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
 composer, teacher, singer, instrumentalist and writer of the very late Renaissance
Renaissance music

Renaissance music is European music written during the Renaissance, approximately 1400 - 1600. Dates of classical music eras, given the lack of abrupt shifts in musical thinking during the 15th century....
 and early Baroque
Baroque music

Baroque music describes a period or style of European classical music approximately extending from Dates of classical music eras. This era is said to begin in music after the Renaissance music and was followed by the Classical music era....
 eras. He was one of the founders of the genre of opera
Opera

Opera is an Performing arts in which singers and musicians perform a dramatic work which combines a text and a musical score. Opera is part of the Western classical music tradition....
, and one of the single most influential creators of the new Baroque style. He was also the father of the composer Francesca Caccini
Francesca Caccini

Francesca Caccini was an Italian composer, singer, lutenist, poet, and music teacher of the early Baroque music era. She was the daughter of Giulio Caccini, and was probably the most famous and influential female European composer, in any genre, between Hildegard of Bingen in the 12th century and the 19th century....
.

Life

Little is known about his early life, but he was born in Rome, the son of the carpenter Michelangelo Caccini; he was the older brother of the Florentine
Florence

Florence is the Capital city of the Italy Regions of Italy of Tuscany and of the provinces of Italy Province of Florence. It is the most populous city in Tuscany and has a population of 364,779 ....
 sculptor Giovanni Caccini. In Rome he studied the lute
Lute

Lute can refer generally to any plucked string instrument with a neck and a deep round back, or more specifically to an instrument from the family of European lutes....
, the viol
Viol

The viol is any one of a family of bow , fretted, stringed instruments musical instruments developed in the 1400s and used primarily in the Renaissance music and Baroque music periods....
 and the harp
Harp

The 'harp' is a stringed instrument which has the plane of its strings positioned perpendicular to the Sounding board. It is also considered to be a percussion instrument....
, and began to acquire a reputation as a singer. In the 1560s, Cosimo de' Medici
Cosimo de' Medici

C?simo di Giovanni degli M?dici , was the first of the Medici political dynasty, de facto rulers of Florence during most of the Italian Renaissance; also known as "Cosimo 'the Elder'" and "Cosimo Pater Patriae."...
 was so impressed with his talent that he took the young Caccini to Florence
Florence

Florence is the Capital city of the Italy Regions of Italy of Tuscany and of the provinces of Italy Province of Florence. It is the most populous city in Tuscany and has a population of 364,779 ....
 for further study.

By 1579, Caccini was singing at the Medici
Medici

The M?dici family was a powerful and influential Florence family from the 14th to 18th century. The family had three popes , numerous rulers of Florence and later members of the French and English royalty....
 court. He was a tenor
Tenor

The tenor is a type of male voice type and is the highest male voice within the modal register. The typical tenor voice lies between the C one octave below middle C to the A above in choral music, and up to high C in solo work....
, and he was able to accompany himself on the viol or the archlute
Archlute

The archlute is a European plucked string instrument developed around 1600 as a compromise between the very large theorbo, the size and re-entrant tuning of which made for difficulties in the performance of solo music, and the Renaissance tenor lute, which lacked the bass range of the theorbo....
; he sang at various entertainments, including weddings and affairs of state, and took part in the sumptuous intermedi
Intermedio

The intermedio, or intermezzo, in the Italian Renaissance, was a theatrical performance or spectacle with Renaissance music and often dance which was performed between the acts of a play to celebrate special occasions in Italian noble court; it was one of the important predecessors to opera, and an influence on other forms like the E...
 of the time, the elaborate musical, dramatic, visual spectacles which were one of the precursors of opera. Also during this time he took part in the movement of humanists, writers, musicians and scholars of the ancient world who formed the Florentine Camerata
Florentine Camerata

The Florentine Camerata was a group of Humanisms, musicians, poets and intellectuals in late Renaissance Florence who gathered under the patronage of Count Giovanni de' Bardi to discuss and guide trends in the arts, especially music and drama....
, the group which gathered at the home of Count Giovanni de' Bardi
Giovanni de' Bardi

Giovanni de' Bardi , Count of Vernio, was an Italian literary critic, writer, composer and soldier....
, and which was dedicated to recovering the supposed lost glory of ancient Greek dramatic music. With Caccini's abilities as a singer, instrumentalist, and composer added to the mix of intellects and talents, the Camerata developed the concept of monody
Monody

In poetry, the term monody has become specialized to refer to a poem in which one person laments another's death. In music, monody has two meanings: 1) it is sometimes used as a synonym for monophony, a single solo line, in opposition to homophony and polyphony; and 2) in music history, it is a solo vocal style distinguished by hav...
—an emotionally affective solo vocal line, accompanied by relatively simple chordal
Chord (music)

In music and music theory a chord is a set of two or more different note that sound simultaneously. Most often, in European-influenced music, chords are tertian Sonority that can be constructed as stacks of thirds relative to some underlying musical scale....
 harmony
Harmony

In Western music, harmony is the use of different pitches simultaneously, and chord s, actual or implied, in music. The word is related to the word "harmonic" which implies related wavelengths of waves....
 on one or more instruments—which was a revolutionary departure from the polyphonic
Polyphony

In music, polyphony is a texture consisting of two or more independent melodic voice , as opposed to music with just one voice or music with one dominant melodic voice accompanied by chord s ....
 practice of the late Renaissance.

In the last two decades of the 16th century, Caccini continued his activities as a singer, teacher and composer. His influence as a teacher has perhaps been underestimated, since he trained dozens of musicians to sing in the new style, including the castrato Giovanni Gualberto Magli, who sang in the first production of Monteverdi's first opera Orfeo
Orfeo

L'Orfeo is one of the earliest works recognized as an opera, composed by Claudio Monteverdi with text by Alessandro Striggio for the annual carnival of Mantua....
.

Caccini made at least one further trip to Rome, in 1592, as the secretary to Count Bardi. According to his own writings, his music and singing met with an enthusiastic response. However, Rome, the home of Palestrina
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina was an Italy composer of the Renaissance music. He was the most famous sixteenth-century representative of the Roman School of musical composition....
 and the Roman School
Roman School

In music history, the Roman School was a group of composers of predominantly church music, in Rome, during the 16th and 17th centuries, therefore spanning the late Renaissance music and early Baroque music eras....
, was musically conservative, and music following Caccini's stylistic lead was relatively rare there until after 1600.

Caccini's character seems to have been less than perfectly honorable, as he was frequently motivated by envy and jealousy, not only in his professional life but for personal advancement with the Medici. On one occasion, he informed to the Grand Duke Francesco on two lovers in the Medici household—Eleonora, the wife of Pietro de' Medici, who was having an illicit affair with Bernardino Antinori—and his informing led directly to Eleonora's murder by Pietro. His rivalry with both Emilio de' Cavalieri
Emilio de' Cavalieri

Emilio de' Cavalieri was an Italians composer, Record producer, organist, diplomat, choreographer and dancer at the end of the Renaissance music era....
 and Jacopo Peri
Jacopo Peri

Jacopo Peri was an Italy composer and singer of the transitional period between the Renaissance music and Baroque music styles, and is often called the inventor of opera....
 seems to have been intense: he may have been the one who arranged for Cavalieri to be removed from his post as director of festivities for the wedding of Henry IV of France
Henry IV of France

Henry de Bourbon, , ruled as Henry III, List of Navarrese monarchs, from 1572 to 1610, and as Henry IV, List of French monarchs, from 1589 to 1610....
 and Maria de' Medici in 1600 (an event which caused Cavalieri to leave Florence in fury), and he also seems to have rushed his own opera Euridice
Euridice (Caccini)

Euridice is an opera in a prologue and one act by the Italy composer Giulio Caccini. The libretto, by Ottavio Rinuccini, had Euridice by Caccini's rival Jacopo Peri in 1600....
 into print before Peri's opera on the same subject could be published, while simultaneously ordering his group of singers to have nothing to do with Peri's production.

After 1605, Caccini was less influential, though he continued to take part in composition and performance of sacred polychoral music. He died in Florence, and is buried in the church of St. Annunziata.

Music and influence

The stile recitativo, as the newly created style of monody was called, proved to be popular not only in Florence, but elsewhere in Italy. Florence and Venice
Venice

Venice is a city in northern Italy, the capital city of the Italian regions Veneto, a population of 271,251 . Together with Padua, Italy, the city is included in the Padua-Venice Metropolitan Area ....
 were the two most progressive musical centers in Europe at the end of the 16th century, and the combination of musical innovations from each place resulted in the development of what came to be known as the Baroque style. Caccini's achievement was to create a type of direct musical expression, as easily understood as speech, which later developed into the operatic recitative
Recitative

Recitative is a style of delivery in which a singer is allowed to adopt the rhythms of ordinary speech. The mostly syllabic recitativo secco is at one end of a spectrum through recitativo accompagnato , the more melismatic arioso, and finally the full blown aria or ensemble, where the pulse is entirely governed by the mus...
, and which influenced numerous other stylistic and textural elements in Baroque music.

Caccini's most influential work was a collection of monodies and songs for solo voice and basso continuo, published in 1602, called Le nuove musiche
Le nuove musiche

Le nuove musiche is a collection of monodies and songs for solo voice and basso continuo by the composer Giulio Caccini, published in Florence in July 1602....
. The introduction to this volume is probably the most clearly written description of the purpose, intent, and correct performance of monody from the time. It includes musical examples of ornaments—for example how a specific passage can be ornamented in several different ways, according to the precise emotion that the singer wishes to convey; it also includes effusive praise for the style which he himself invented, and amusing disdain for the work of more conservative composers of the period.

Works

Caccini wrote three operas—Euridice
Euridice (opera)

Euridice is an opera by Jacopo Peri, with additional music by Giulio Caccini. First performed in Florence on October 6 1600, it has a libretto written by Ottavio Rinuccini, based on Ovid's Metamorphoses ....
 (1600), Il rapimento di Cefalo (1600), and Euridice
Euridice (Caccini)

Euridice is an opera in a prologue and one act by the Italy composer Giulio Caccini. The libretto, by Ottavio Rinuccini, had Euridice by Caccini's rival Jacopo Peri in 1600....
 (1602), though the first two included music by others (mainly Peri for the first Euridice). In addition he wrote the music for one intermedio (Io che dal ciel cader farei la luna) (1589); and he published two collections of songs and madrigals
Madrigal (music)

A madrigal is a type of secular vocal music composition, written during the Renaissance music and early Baroque music eras. Throughout most of its history it was Polyphony and unaccompanied by instruments, with the number of voices varying from two to eight, but most frequently three to six....
, both titled Le nuove musiche, in 1602 and 1614. Most of the madrigals are through-composed and contain little repetition; some of the songs, however, are strophic. No music for multiple voices survives, even though the records from Florence indicate he was involved with polychoral music around 1610. He was predominantly a composer of solo song, and it is in this capacity that he acquired his immense fame.

Among the most famous of his madrigals is Amarilli, mia bella.

Ave Maria: Modern hoax

The Latvian soprano Inessa Galante
Inessa Galante

Inessa Galante, , is a Latvians soprano opera singer.She is best known for performance of Ave Maria , an aria by Vladimir Vavilov, from her "Debut" album 1995, which started spreading worldwide interest in the piece....
 recorded in 1994 an Ave Maria by Caccini
Ave Maria (Giulio Caccini)

Ave Maria is a popular and much recorded aria by Vladimir Vavilov, generally misattributed to Giulio Caccini, and composed around 1970. Vavilov himself published and recorded it on the Melodiya label with the ascription to "Anonymous work" in 1972....
. Despite the title, the aria was not composed by Caccini but by Vladimir Vavilov
Vladimir Vavilov

Vladimir Vavilov was a Russian guitarist, lutenist and composer. He was a student of P. Isakov and I. Admoni at the Rimski-Korsakov Music College in St Petersburg....
 in 1972: the reason leading to this false attribution is still unclear. Since 1994, numerous artists including Andrea Bocelli
Andrea Bocelli

Dr. Andrea Bocelli, Order of Merit of the Republic, Doctor of Laws is an Italians Operatic pop tenor and a classical music singer who has also performed in operas....
 and Charlotte Church
Charlotte Church

Charlotte Idris Church is a Wales singer-songwriter, actress and television presenter. She rose to fame in childhood as a European classical music before branching into pop music in 2005....
 covered the composition, and the attribution of the work is often misunderstood by the public, due to the misleading title.

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