diumenge, 2 d’octubre del 2022

BASSANI, Giovanni Battista (1650-1716) - Messa per li defonti concertata

Anoniem - Angels playing music


Giovanni Battista Bassani (1650-1716) - Messa per li defonti concertata (1698)
Performers: Capella Musicale della Basіlіca di Santa Maria Mаggіore in Bеrgamo; Crіstіan Gеntіlіnі (conductor)

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Italian composer, violinist and organist. He is traditionally said to have studied in Venice with Daniele Castrovillari and in Ferrara with Giovanni Legrenzi, maestro di cappella of the Accademia dello Spirito Santo there from 1657 to 1670. The suggestion made by Hawkins, Burney and others that Bassani was Corelli's violin teacher is without foundation although he is likely to have been in touch with Bolognese musicians between early 1675 and 1677. From 1667 he was associated with the Accademia della Morte, Ferrara, where he acted as organist and composed his first oratorios. The libretto of L'Esaltazione di S Croce, performed at the accademy on 7 April 1675, refers to him as ‘già organista della medesima Chiesa’, suggesting that he had already left the position of organist by then. On 3 June 1677 he became a member of the Accademia Filarmonica at Bologna and in the same year he published his op.1, in which he is called ‘maestro di musica e organista’ of the Confraternità della Morte in Finale Emilia, near Modena. In 1680 he was maestro di cappella at the court of Duke Alessandro II della Mirandola, a position he probably accepted shortly after the performance of his oratorio L'Amore ingeniero in S Maria Maddalena there in 1678. On 9 April 1682 he was elected principe of the Accademia Filarmonica, Bologna. Also in 1682 he started participating in the annual celebration of the Accademia Filarmonica in S Giovanni in Monte, contributing several compositions up to 1694. At the end of 1683, probably his most productive year as a composer, he was elected maestro di cappella of the Accademia della Morte, Ferrara, succeeding G.F. Tosi. In 1686 he was appointed maestro di cappella of Ferrara Cathedral; because of his contribution to the musical life of that city he became known as ‘Bassani of Ferrara’.

Between 1710 and 1712 he composed 76 services in several cycles for use at Ferrara Cathedral. On 9 May 1712 he was called to Bergamo to direct the music at S Maria Maggiore. He also taught at the music school of the Congregazione di Carità, Bergamo, and continued in both posts until his death. Bassani's music was prominent in the middle Baroque period in Italy, when the concertato style predominated. His sacred works in this style are typical of those of the Bolognese school of composers in the last quarter of the 17th century, such as G.P. Colonna, G.B. Vitali and G.A. Perti. Perhaps above all he should be recognized for his solo cantatas, both sacred and secular. Yet although he was a prolific composer of other types of vocal music too, his fame has rested chiefly on his trio sonatas for strings. During his lifetime he was celebrated as a violinist. Some even considered his playing superior to Corelli's, a reputation probably enhanced by Burney, who also claimed that no one before him had written quite so idiomatically for the violin. A sharp contrast between chamber and church sonatas, previously made by Legrenzi, is maintained by Bassani in his two known sets of trio sonatas. His op.1 contains 12 chamber sonatas, in each of which the four dance movements announced on the title-page follow the order given there. However, the number and character of the movements in the 12 church sonatas of op.5 are variable, and they often have polyphonic textures. According to Newman, Bassani's sonatas differ somewhat from Corelli's in that he preferred long unfolding lines to short balanced phrases, and the overall form, especially of the church sonatas, is less well integrated.

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