![]() ![]() Early LifeĪntonio Lucio Vivaldi was born on March 4, 1678, in Venice, Italy. He was also known for his operas, including Argippo and Bajazet. A prolific composer who created hundreds of works, he became renowned for his concertos in Baroque style, becoming a highly influential innovator in form and pattern. John Henken is Director of Publications for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Association.Antonio Vivaldi was ordained as a priest though he instead chose to follow his passion for music. Superbly apt in this case, it hardly needs apology or explanation. Vivaldi “borrowed” music more frequently than was once thought, and every bit as creatively as Handel did more famously. The brief “Quoniam tu solus sanctus” picks up his celebratory opening music, serving mainly to set up the concluding double fugue on “Cum Sancto Spiritu.” Unlike Haydn, Vivaldi was not highly skilled in strict counterpoint, and for this fugue he appropriated the conclusion of a recent Gloria by Veronese composer Giovanni Maria Ruggieri. “Qui sedes” is another concerto-like movement, of the fiery finale type.įor the actual finale, Vivaldi created a vividly effective and very efficient composite. “Domine Deus” is a sweetly rocking Siciliano pairing soprano and oboe, and “Domine Deus, Agnus Dei,” with its combination of soloist and chorus, apparently caused Vivaldi the most trouble, at least on manuscript evidence. “Laudamus te” is a duet for two sopranos, set up like a concerto movement with instrumental ritornellos between the passages for the intertwined singers. There are several movements with vocal solos, which would have been sung by members of the chorus. This means ebullient and joyful music such as the opening chorus, with its distinctive solo oboe and trumpet, and deeply expressive slower music, such as the following movement, with its chromatic polyphony and suspensions over a steadily pulsing bass line. The scoring and style is quite characteristic of Vivaldi’s other music for the Pietà, including the better-known concertos. without male tenors or basses and without transposing those parts up an octave, at least not consistently). More controversially, scholarly opinion now holds that all the vocal parts were sung by the women’s chorus of the institution and at pitch (i.e. This Gloria was undoubtedly one of the works of this period. In June 1715 the board of the Pietà voted to award Vivaldi the chorus master’s annual bonus for “his excellent musical compositions… a complete Mass, a Vespers, an oratorio, over 30 motets, and other labors” and to “stimulate him to make further contributions and to perfect still more the performing abilities of the girls of this our chorus.” One of these periods came in the years 1713-1719, and Vivaldi worked prodigiously to fill the musical void. ![]() But on at least two occasions the post of chorus master at the Pietà fell vacant for an extended period, and Vivaldi stepped in to supply music for the chorus. The host of pioneering concertos he wrote – for the Ospedale della Pietà, the famous Venice orphanage for girls and women, and then for wealthy music lovers throughout Europe – formed his day job, as it were, and opera was his chief distraction from it. Although Vivaldi did compose a substantial body of sacred music, it was never his main interest. ![]()
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