- Agostino Agazzari
Agostino Agazzari (
December 2 ,1578 -April 10 ,1640 ) was an Italiancomposer and music theorist.Biography
Agazzari was born in
Siena to an aristocratic family. After working inRome , as a teacher at the Germanic College, he returned to Siena in 1607, becoming first organist and later choirmaster of the cathedral there. He was a close friend ofLodovico Grossi da Viadana , the early innovator of thebasso continuo .Agazzari wrote several books of sacred music, madrigals and the pastoral drama "Eumelio" (1606). Stylistically, "Eumelio" is similar to the famous composition by Cavalieri "Rappresentatione di Anima, e di Corpo" of 1600, a work of singular significance in the development of the
oratorio . In the preface to the drama he mentions that he was asked to set the text to music only one month before the performance; he composed the music in two weeks, and copied the parts and rehearsed it in the remaining two weeks, a feat which would be impressive even in the modern age. Agazzari is best known, however, for "Del sonare sopra il basso" (1607), one of the earliest and most important works on basso continuo. This treatise was immensely important in the diffusion of the technique throughout Europe: for example,Michael Praetorius used large portions of it in his "Syntagma musicum" in Germany in 1618-1619. As was true with many late Renaissance and earlyBaroque theoretical treatises, it described a practice which was already occurring. In large part it was based on a study of his friend Viadana's "Cento concerti ecclesiastici" (published inVenice in 1602), the first collection of sacred music to use the basso continuo.Most of his compositions are sacred music, and motets of the early Baroque variety (for two or three voices with instruments) make up the majority of them. All of the motets are accompanied by basso continuo, with organ providing the sustaining line. His madrigals, on the other hand, are "
a cappella ", in the late Renaissance style, so Agazzari simultaneously showed extreme progressive tendencies as well as some more conservative: unusually, his progressive music was sacred, and his conservative was secular, a situation almost unique among composers of the early Baroque.He died in Siena.
References
* Colleen Reardon, "Agostino Agazzari and Music at Siena Cathedral, 1597-1641" (OUP, 1993)
*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)
* Agostino Agazzari, "Del sonare sopra il basso", tr. Oliver Strunk, in Source Readings in Music History. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1950.External links
* [http://icking-music-archive.org/ByComposer/Agazzari.html Draft PDF version of "Del Sonare Sopra'l Basso Con Tutti Li Stromenti"]
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