Giovan Leonardo Primavera: Difference between revisions

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==Life==
==Life==
'''Born:''' ''c.''1540–45, Barletta
'''Born:''' ''c.''1540–45, Barletta
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'''Died:''' after 1585, Naples?
'''Died:''' after 1585, Naples?


'''Biography:'''<br>
'''Biography:'''
 
Italian composer and poet. About 1560 he left Barletta for Naples where he served Fabrizio Gesualdo, to whom he dedicated his earliest madrigals. He probably worked in Venice from 1565 to 1578 with a brief sojourn in Milan sometime between April 1572 and September 1573. Primavera returned to Naples by 1585 and was on good terms with [[Carlo Gesualdo]], to whom he dedicated his seventh book of madrigals in that year.
Italian composer and poet. About 1560 he left Barletta for Naples where he served Fabrizio Gesualdo, to whom he dedicated his earliest madrigals. He probably worked in Venice from 1565 to 1578 with a brief sojourn in Milan sometime between April 1572 and September 1573. Primavera returned to Naples by 1585 and was on good terms with [[Carlo Gesualdo]], to whom he dedicated his seventh book of madrigals in that year.


Primavera shared the title-page of his first book of napolitane with Giovanni Leonardo dell’Arpa, whose arioso style he evidently admired. His first two madrigal books consist mainly of settings of Petrarch’s sonnets in the customary two parts. An early six-part madrigal, ''Nasce la gioia mia'' was the model for a parody mass by [[Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina|Palestrina]]. Later books contain poems by Tansillo (''A caso un giorno''), Tarquinia Molza and a few by Primavera himself (in his third book he apologized for his ‘little and badly composed rhymes’). The seventh book opens with a canzonetta-madrigal in the composer’s most modern vein (Sannazaro’s ''Fillide mia'') and includes a complete sestina (Petrarch’s ''Chi è fermato'').
Primavera shared the title-page of his first book of napolitane with [[Giovanni Leonardo dell'Arpa]], whose arioso style he evidently admired. His first two madrigal books consist mainly of settings of [[Petrarch]]'s sonnets in the customary two parts. An early six-part madrigal, ''Nasce la gioia mia'' was the model for a parody mass by [[Palestrina]]. Later books contain poems by Tansillo (''A caso un giorno''), Tarquinia Molza and a few by Primavera himself (in his third book he apologized for his ‘little and badly composed rhymes’). The seventh book opens with a canzonetta-madrigal in the composer’s most modern vein ([[Sannazaro]]'s ''Fillide mia'') and includes a complete sestina (Petrarch's ''Chi è fermato'').
 
{{WikipediaLink}}
{{WikipediaLink}}
==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
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==Publications==
==Publications==
*''Il primo et secondo libro de madrigali'', 5-6vv (Venice, 1565)
*''Il primo et secondo libro de madrigali'', 5-6vv (Venice, 1565)
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*''Il settimo libro de madrigali'', 5vv (Venice, 1585)
*''Il settimo libro de madrigali'', 5vv (Venice, 1585)
*1 madrigal, 4vv (1566); 1 madrigal, 6vv (1584)
*1 madrigal, 4vv (1566); 1 madrigal, 6vv (1584)
*2 madrigals in Tarasconi Codex, nos.185 & 200
*2 madrigals in Tarasconi Codex, nos. 185 & 200


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:1540 births]]
[[Category:1540 births]]
[[Category:1586 deaths]]
[[Category:1586 deaths]]
[[Category:Composers (unhosted)]]
[[Category:Composers]]
[[Category:Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Italian composers]]
[[Category:Italian composers]]
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Revision as of 00:01, 28 October 2019

Life

Born: c.1540–45, Barletta

Died: after 1585, Naples?

Biography:

Italian composer and poet. About 1560 he left Barletta for Naples where he served Fabrizio Gesualdo, to whom he dedicated his earliest madrigals. He probably worked in Venice from 1565 to 1578 with a brief sojourn in Milan sometime between April 1572 and September 1573. Primavera returned to Naples by 1585 and was on good terms with Carlo Gesualdo, to whom he dedicated his seventh book of madrigals in that year.

Primavera shared the title-page of his first book of napolitane with Giovanni Leonardo dell'Arpa, whose arioso style he evidently admired. His first two madrigal books consist mainly of settings of Petrarch's sonnets in the customary two parts. An early six-part madrigal, Nasce la gioia mia was the model for a parody mass by Palestrina. Later books contain poems by Tansillo (A caso un giorno), Tarquinia Molza and a few by Primavera himself (in his third book he apologized for his ‘little and badly composed rhymes’). The seventh book opens with a canzonetta-madrigal in the composer’s most modern vein (Sannazaro's Fillide mia) and includes a complete sestina (Petrarch's Chi è fermato).

View the Wikipedia article on Giovan Leonardo Primavera.

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

  • Il primo et secondo libro de madrigali, 5-6vv (Venice, 1565)
  • Il primo libro de canzone napolitane, 3vv (Venice, 1565)
  • Il secondo libro de canzon napolitane, 3vv (Venice, 1566)
  • Il terzo libro de madrigali, 5-6vv (Venice, 1566), 1 intab. for lute (1584)
  • Il primo libro delle napolitane, 4vv (Venice, 1569)
  • Il terzo libro delle villotte alla napolitana, 3vv (Venice, 1570), 3 intab. for lute (1570)
  • I frutti … libro quarto, 5-10vv (Venice, 1573)
  • Il quarto libro de le canzoni napolitane, 3vv (Venice, 1574)
  • Il quinto libro di madrigali, 5vv (Venice, 1578)
  • Il sesto libro de madrigali, 5vv; lost, cited in Pitoni
  • Il settimo libro de madrigali, 5vv (Venice, 1585)
  • 1 madrigal, 4vv (1566); 1 madrigal, 6vv (1584)
  • 2 madrigals in Tarasconi Codex, nos. 185 & 200

External links

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