- Annibale Stabile
Annibale Stabile (c.1535 – April 1595) was an Italian composer of the Renaissance. He was a member of the
Roman School of composition, and probably was a pupil of Palestrina. He was active mainly atRome but moved briefly toKraków ,Poland at the end of his life.Life
Records of his early life are inexact, but he was probably born in
Naples , and was likely a boy singer atSt. John Lateran in 1544 and 1545. An "Annibale contralto" is also listed at the same church in 1555 and 1556; since it is unlikely that a twenty-year-old would have been listed as acontralto , this may have been a different person; alternatively it has been proposed that Annibale was born in the mid 1540s. Stabile himself mentioned that he studied with Palestrina, who was "maestro di cappella" at St. John Lateran in 1555 and 1556.Stabile became "maestro di cappella" at St. John Lateran in 1575, and retained that position until 1578, at which time he moved on to a similar position at the
Collegio Germanico . SinceGiovanni Dragoni also held the position of "maestro di cappella" at St. John Lateran, beginning in 1576, the two must have shared the post for two years. In 1582 Stabile was ordained apriest ; and in 1590 he changed jobs again, this time becoming "maestro di cappella" atSanta Maria Maggiore , where he was employed from 1591 to 1594. He went toPoland in early 1595, serving KingSigismund III Vasa , who frequently employed Italian musicians, but Stabile died after being inKraków only two months. The cause of his death is not indicated, but the journey to Poland was not without risk; the renowned madrigal composerLuca Marenzio also died after a trip to Poland (1599), which he claimed ruined his health.Music
Stabile wrote
mass es,motet s, litanies,hymn s, and other sacred pieces, in nine separate publications. Two of his collections of masses were first published in Warsaw in 1979, as "Msze królewskie" (Royal Masses), which he wrote for his employer Sigismund III. One of his masses — the "Missa cantantibus organis" — is for the unusual combination of 12 independent voices, and was a collaboration with Palestrina and others. Only the "Kyrie ", "Credo " and "Crucifixus " survive from this work.Stabile's style was similar to that of Palestrina, especially in his vocal music; although he normally wrote music somewhat less contrapuntally complex than that of his teacher, he occasionally indulged in canon, especially in his
motet s. His secular music, mainly madrigals, were often light in character, an unusual feature for a member of the Roman School, whose music was most often noted for its reverence, if not severity.He published three books of madrigals. The second of the three he wrote in collaboration with
Giovanni Maria Nanino (1581). All three of these collections were published inVenice , a friendlier environment for publication of light secular music, and the most active center of music publishing in Italy in the late 16th century.References and further reading
* Ruth I. DeFord: "Annibale Stabile", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed March 12, 2006), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
*Gustave Reese , "Music in the Renaissance". New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
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