Girolamo Alessandro Frescobaldi (Italian: [dʒiˈrɔːlamo freskoˈbaldi]; also Gerolamo, Girolimo, and Geronimo Alissandro; September 1583[n 1] – 1 March 1643) was an Italian composer and virtuoso keyboard player.[1] Born in the Duchy of Ferrara, he was one of the most important composers of keyboard music in the late Renaissance and early Baroque periods. A child prodigy, Frescobaldi studied under Luzzasco Luzzaschi in Ferrara, but was influenced by many composers, including Ascanio Mayone, Giovanni Maria Trabaci, and Claudio Merulo. Girolamo Frescobaldi was appointed organist of St. Peter's Basilica, a focal point of power for the Cappella Giulia (a musical organisation), from 21 July 1608 until 1628 and again from 1634 until his death.[2]
Frescobaldi's printed collections contain some of the most influential music of the 17th century. His work influenced Johann Jakob Froberger, Johann Sebastian Bach, Henry Purcell, and other major composers. Pieces from his celebrated collection of liturgical organ music, Fiori musicali (1635), were used as models of strict counterpoint as late as the 19th century.
Life
Frescobaldi was born in Ferrara. His father Filippo was a man of property, possibly an organist since both Girolamo and his half-brother Cesare became organists.[3] (There is no evidence that the Frescobaldi of Ferrara were related to the homonymous Florentine noble house.) Frescobaldi studied under Luzzasco Luzzaschi, a noted composer of madrigals and an organist at the court of Duke Alfonso II d'Este. Although Luzzaschi's keyboard music is relatively unknown today (much of it has been lost), contemporary accounts suggest he was both a gifted composer and performer, one of the few who could perform and compose for Nicola Vicentino's archicembalo.[4] Contemporary accounts describe Frescobaldi as a child prodigy who was "brought through various principal cities of Italy"; he quickly gained prominence as a performer and patronage of important noblemen. Composers who visited Ferrara during the period included numerous important masters such as Claudio Monteverdi, John Dowland, Orlande de Lassus, Claudio Merulo, and Carlo Gesualdo.
In his early twenties, Frescobaldi left his native Ferrara for Rome. Reports place Frescobaldi in that city as early as 1604, but his presence can only be confirmed by 1607. He was the church organist at Santa Maria in Trastevere, recorded as “Girolamo Organista”, from January to May of that year.[5] He was also employed by Guido Bentivoglio, the Archbishop of Rhodes, and accompanied him on a trip to Flanders where Bentivoglio had been made nuncio to the court. It was Frescobaldi's only trip outside Italy.[6] Although the court at Brussels was musically among the most important in Europe at the time, there is no evidence of Peeter Cornet's or Peter Philips' influence on Frescobaldi. Based on Frescobaldi's preface to his first publication, the 1608 volume of madrigals, the composer also visited Antwerp, where local musicians, impressed with his music, persuaded him to publish at least some of it. While abroad, Frescobaldi was elected on 21 July 1608 to succeed Ercole Pasquini as organist of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.[7] Frescobaldi remained in Flanders, however, through the summer and did not return to Rome until 29 October (delaying his arrival with an extended stay in Milan to publish another collection of music, the keyboard Fantasie).[8] He took up his duties on 31 October and held the position, albeit intermittently, until his death.[9] He also joined Enzo Bentivoglio's musical establishment after the latter settled in Rome in 1608, although he grew estranged from his patron after an affair with a young woman.[10] A scandal involving competition between Bentivoglio and the Medici family eventually forced him to leave his position.
Between 1610 and 1613, Frescobaldi began to work for Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini. He remained in his service until after the death of Cardinal Aldobrandini in February 1621.[11] On 18 February 1613, he married Orsola Travaglini, known as Orsola del Pino.[12] The couple had five children: Francesco (an illegitimate child born on 29 May 1612), Maddalena (an illegitimate child born on 22 July 1613), Domenico (8 November 1614, poet and art collector), Stefano (1616/7), and Caterina (September 1619).[13]
In October 1614, Frescobaldi was approached by an agent of the Duke of Mantua, Ferdinando I Gonzaga. Frescobaldi was given such a good offer he agreed to enter his employ. However, at his arrival in Mantua the reception was so cold that Frescobaldi returned to Rome by April 1615.[14] He continued publishing his music: two editions of the first book of toccatas and a book of ricercars and canzonas appeared in 1615. In addition to his duties at the Basilica and the Aldobrandini establishment, Frescobaldi took pupils and occasionally worked at other churches. The period from 1615 to 1628 was Frescobaldi's most productive time. His major works from this period were instrumental pieces including: a second version of the first book of toccatas (1615–6), ricercars and canzonas (1615), the cappricios (1624), the second book of toccatas (1627), and a volume of canzonas for one to four instruments and continuo (1628).[15]
St. Peter's Basilica gave Frescobaldi permission to leave Rome on 22 November 1628. Girolamo moved to Florence, Italy into the service of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, a Medici. During his sojourn there he was the highest paid musician and served as the organist of the Florence baptistery for a year.[16] He stayed in the city until 1634; the period resulted in, among other things, the publication of two books of arias (1630). The composer returned to Rome in April 1634, having been summoned into the service of the powerful Barberini family, i.e. Pope Urban VIII, the highest prize offered to any musician.[17] He continued working at St. Peter's, and was also employed by Cardinal Francesco Barberini, who also employed the famous lutenist Johannes Hieronymus Kapsberger. Frescobaldi published one of his most influential collections, Fiori musicali, in 1635, and also produced reprints of older collections in 1637.[18] No other prints followed (although a collection of previously unpublished works appeared in 1645, and in 1664 Domenico Frescobaldi still possessed pieces by his father that were never published). Frescobaldi died on 1 March 1643 after an illness that lasted for 10 days. He was buried in Santi Apostoli, but the tomb disappeared during a rebuilding of the church in the late 18th century. A grave bearing his name and honoring him as one of the fathers of Italian music exists in the church today.[3]
Music
Frescobaldi was, after Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck, the first of the great composers of the ancient Franco-Netherlandish-Italian tradition who chose to focus his creative energy on instrumental composition.[19] Frescobaldi brought a wide range of emotion to the relatively unplumbed depths of instrumental music.[20] Keyboard music occupies the most important position in Frescobaldi's extant oeuvre.[21] He published eight collections of it during his lifetime, several were reprinted under his supervision, and more pieces were either published posthumously or transmitted in manuscripts.[22] His collection of instrumental ensemble canzonas, Il Primo Libro delle Canzoni, was published in two editions in Rome in 1628, and substantially revised in the Venice edition of 1634. Of the forty pieces in the collection, ten were replaced and all were revised to various degrees, sixteen of them radically so. This extensive editing attests to Frescobaldi's ongoing interest in the utmost perfection of his pieces and collections.[23]
Frescobaldi's compositional canon began with his 1615 publications.[24] One of the publications issued in 1615 was Ricercari, et canzone. This work returned to the old-fashioned, pure style of ricercar. Fast note values and triple meter were not allowed to detract from the purity of style.[25] A second publication of 1615 was the Toccate e partite which established expressive keyboard style. Frescobaldi did not obey the conventional rules for composing, ensuring no two works have a similar structure.[25] From 1615 to 1628, Frescobaldi's publications connect him with the Congregazione exactly when the group's activities determined the Roman musical trends.[26]
Frescobaldi's next stream of compositions expanded their artistic range beyond the keyboard music that he had focused on previously.[24] Frescobaldi's next four publications after 1627 were composed for instrumental and vocal ensembles in both sacred and secular genres.[27] The collections of thirty sacred works of 1627 and forty ensemble canzonas of 1628 are structural opposites. However, both are written in a more traditional style that makes them appropriate for church use.[27] The Arie musicali, published in 1630, were probably composed earlier while Frescobaldi was in Rome. These two volumes utilize keyboard pairs, the romanesca/ruggiero and the ciaconna/passacaglia, within the vocal mode.[27]
In 1635, Frescobaldi published Fiori musicali. This group of works is his only composition devoted to church music and his last collection containing completely new pieces.[27] The Fiori experiments with many types of genres within the liturgical confines of a mass. Almost all of the genres practiced by Frescobaldi are present within this collection except for the popular style.[27] Frescobaldi cultivated the old form of organ improvisation on a Gregorian chant cantus firmus that is best displayed within the Fiori muscali. The organ alternated with the choir on versets and improvised in a contrapuntal style.[28] Works from Fiori musicali were still used as models of strict counterpoint in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Aside from Fiori musicali, Frescobaldi's two books of toccatas and partitas (1615 and 1627) are his most important collections.[29] His toccatas could be used in masses and liturgical occasions. These toccatas served as preludes to larger pieces, or were pieces of substantial length standing alone.[30] The Secondo libro, written in 1627, stretches the conception of the genres included in the first book of toccatas. More variety is introduced with different rhythmic techniques and four organ pieces.[21] Both books open with a set of twelve toccatas written in a flamboyant improvisatory style and alternating fast-note runs or passaggi with more intimate and meditative parts, called affetti, plus short bursts of contrapuntal imitation.
Virtuosic techniques permeate the music and make some of the pieces challenging even for modern performers—Toccata IX from Secondo libro di toccata bears an inscription by the composer: "Non senza fatiga si giunge al fine", "Not without toil will you get to the end." Such short remarks appear also in works from Fiori musicali; one of these refers to a fifth voice that is to be sung by the performer at key moments during a ricercar, and the key moments are left to the performer to find. Frescobaldi's famous note for this piece is ""Intendami chi puo che m'intend' io"—"Understand me, [who can,] as long as I can understand myself". The concept is yet another illustration of Frescobaldi's innovative, bold approach to composition.
Although Frescobaldi was influenced by numerous earlier composers such as the Neapolitans Ascanio Mayone and Giovanni Maria Trabaci and the Venetian Claudio Merulo, his music represents much more than a summary of its influences. Aside from his masterful treatment of traditional forms, Frescobaldi is important for his numerous innovations, particularly in the field of tempo: unlike his predecessors, he would include in his pieces sections in contrasting tempi, and some of his publications include a lengthy preface detailing tempo-related aspects of performance.[31][32] In effect, he made a compromise between the ancient white mensural notation with a rigid tactus and the modern notion of tempo. Although this idea was not new (it was used by, for example, Giulio Caccini), Frescobaldi was among the first to popularize it in keyboard music.
Frescobaldi also made substantial contributions to the art of variation; he may have been one of the first composers to introduce the juxtaposition of the ciaccona and passacaglia into the music repertory, as well as the first to compose a set of variations on an original theme (all earlier examples are variations on folk or popular melodies).[21] Frescobaldi showed an increasing interest in composing intricate works out of unrelated individual pieces during his last years of composing.[23] The last work Frescobaldi composed, Cento partite sopra passacagli, was his most impressive creative work. The Cento displays Frescobaldi's new interest in combining different pieces that were first written independently.[23]
The composer's other works include collections of canzonas, fantasias, capriccios, and other keyboard genres, as well as four prints of vocal music (motets and arias; one book of motets is lost) and one of ensemble canzonas.
Legacy
Contemporary critics acknowledged Frescobaldi as one of the greatest trendsetters of keyboard music of their time. Even critics who did not approve of Frescobaldi's vocal works agreed that he was a genius both playing and composing for the keyboard.[33] Frescobaldi's music did not lose direct influence until the 1660s, and his works held influence over the development of keyboard music over a century after his death. Bernardo Pasquini promoted Girolamo Frescobaldi to the rank of pedagogical authority.[34]
Frescobaldi's pupils included numerous Italian composers, but the most important was a German, Johann Jakob Froberger, who studied with him in 1637–41.[35] Froberger's works were influenced not only by Frescobaldi but also by Michelangelo Rossi; he became one of the most influential composers of the 17th century, and, similarly to Frescobaldi, his works were still studied in the 18th century. Frescobaldi's work was known to, and influenced, numerous major composers outside Italy, including Henry Purcell, Johann Pachelbel, and Johann Sebastian Bach.
Bach is known to have owned a number of Frescobaldi's works, including a manuscript copy of Frescobaldi's Fiori musicali (Venice, 1635), which he signed and dated 1714 and performed in Weimar the same year. Frescobaldi's influence on Bach is most evident in his early choral preludes for organ. Finally, Frescobaldi's toccatas and canzonas, with their sudden changes and contrasting sections, may have inspired the celebrated stylus fantasticus of the North German organ school.
The WYSIWYG editor for LilyPond music files is called Frescobaldi to honour the composer.[36]
References
Notes
- ↑ Sources are in dispute about the interpretation of Frescobaldi's birth and baptism records; 9 September has long appeared in references as his baptism date (which would mean he was born no later than that date, and probably a day or two earlier), but more recent research suggests a birth date of 13 September or 15 September may be more accurate.
Citations
- ↑ Hammond & Silbiger 2001.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 47, 54, 79. 81.
- 1 2 Hammond 1983, p. 3.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 7, 10.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 16, 20.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 28.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 31.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 31, 33.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 33, 47.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 30, 40, 41, 43.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 45.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 44.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 44, 58.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 47, 54.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 54, 66.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 71–72.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 78.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 83, 86–87.
- ↑ Silbiger 1987, p. 8.
- ↑ Silbiger 1987, p. 2.
- 1 2 3 Silbiger 1987, p. 5.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, pp. 274–289.
- 1 2 3 Silbiger 1987, p. 7.
- 1 2 Silbiger 1987, p. 4.
- 1 2 Silbiger 1987, p. 3.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 64.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Silbiger 1987, p. 6.
- ↑ Bukofzer 1947, p. 48.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 66.
- ↑ Bukofzer 1947, p. 47.
- ↑ Bukofzer 1947, pp. 48, 50.
- ↑ Artz 1962, p. 143.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 93.
- ↑ Hammond 1983, p. 93–95.
- ↑ Hammond & Silbiger 2001, "6. Pupils.".
- ↑ "Frescobaldi: Edit LilyPond sheet music with ease!". frescobaldi.org. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
Sources
- Artz, Frederick B (1962). From the Renaissance to Romanticism: Trends in Style in Art, Literature, and Music, 1300–1830. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. pp. 143–205.
- Bukofzer, Manfred F. (1947). Music in the Baroque Era from Monteverdi to Bach. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. pp. 43–54.
- Hammond, Frederick (1983). Girolamo Frescobaldi. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-35438-9.
- Hammond, Frederick; Silbiger, Alexander (2001). "Frescobaldi, Girolamo [Gerolamo, Girolimo] Alessandro". Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.10219. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
- Silbiger, Alexander (1987). "An Introduction to Frescobaldi". In Silbiger, Alexander (ed.). Frescobaldi Studies. Durham: Duke University. pp. 1–10.
Further reading
- Apel, Willi (1972). The History of Keyboard Music to 1700. Translated by Tischler, Hans. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-21141-7. Originally published as Geschichte der Orgel- und Klaviermusik bis 1700 by Bärenreiter-Verlag, Kassel.
- Morgante, Domenico (1986). "Girolamo Frescobaldi". Dizionario Enciclopedico Universale della Musica e dei Musicisti (DEUMM) (in Italian). Vol. III. Torino: UTET.
External links
- Free scores by Girolamo Frescobaldi at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- Free scores by Girolamo Frescobaldi in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
- Kunst der Fuge: Girolamo Frescobaldi – MIDI files
- FTCO Frescobaldi Thematic Catalogue Online; An online thematic catalogue of all compositions attributed to Girolamo Frescobaldi and a database of the early sources, modern and facsimile editions, and literature. JSCM Instrumenta, Volume 6, Society for Seventeenth-Century Music.
- Frescobaldi dedicated website