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'''Born:''' 20 January 1562, Florence, Italy
==Life==
'''Born:''' 20 January 1562, Florence
 
'''Died:''' 28 March 1621, Florence


'''Died:''' 28 March 1621, Florence, Italy
'''Biography:'''


'''Biography:''' Italian poet, courtier and the first librettist.  
Italian poet, courtier and considered as the first librettist. He came from a noble Florentine family prominent in cultural and diplomatic circles since the 13th century. His education was presumably that of a courtier – some classical training and enough exposure to the arts to have made him a lively participant in court entertainments in Florence, for which he began writing verses as early as 1579 (''Maschere d'Amazzoni''). The court chronicler Bastiano de' Rossi called him ‘a very fine connoisseur’ of music, and G.B. Doni suggested that [[Claudio Monteverdi|Monteverdi]] relied on him greatly while setting his libretto for ''Arianna''.


==Life==
'''Works'''
He came from a noble Florentine family prominent in cultural and diplomatic circles since the 13th century. His education was presumably that of a courtier – some classical training and enough exposure to the arts to have made him a lively participant in court entertainments in Florence, for which he began writing verses as early as 1579 (''Maschere d'Amazzoni''). The court chronicler Bastiano de' Rossi called him ‘a very fine connoisseur’ of music, and G.B. Doni suggested that [[Claudio Monteverdi|Monteverdi]] relied on him greatly while setting his libretto for ''Arianna''.


==Works==
Already a member of the Accademia Fiorentina, Rinuccini in 1586 joined another Florentine academy, the Alterati, whose members were particularly interested in dramatic theory and music; he took the name ‘Il Sonnacchioso’ (‘the somnolent one’). There is no evidence to affirm Rinuccini's connection with Giovanni de' Bardi's Camerata, but Bardi (like other musical humanists such as Girolamo Mei and Jacopo Corsi) was also a member of the Accademia degli Alterati and collaborated with Rinuccini on the 1589 ''intermedi'', which he produced for the wedding celebrations of the Grand Duke Ferdinando I. Of the six ''intermedi'', which are loosely unified by their dramatization of the marvellous powers of ancient music, Rinuccini was alone responsible for the text of three (nos. 2, 3 and 6) and wrote the greater part of two more (nos. 1 and 5), to which Bardi also contributed some verses. The third ''intermedio'', which depicts the battle between Apollo and the dragon, later served Rinuccini as the basis for the opening scene of his first operatic text, ''Dafne'', which he claimed to have written ‘solely to test the power of music’. Thus Apollo, god of both music and the sun, by virtue of his power in vanquishing the irrational forces represented by the python, was his first aesthetic spokesman.
Already a member of the Accademia Fiorentina, Rinuccini in 1586 joined another Florentine academy, the Alterati, whose members were particularly interested in dramatic theory and music; he took the name ‘Il Sonnacchioso’ (‘the somnolent one’). There is no evidence to affirm Rinuccini's connection with Giovanni de' Bardi's Camerata, but Bardi (like other musical humanists such as Girolamo Mei and Jacopo Corsi) was also a member of the Accademia degli Alterati and collaborated with Rinuccini on the 1589 ''intermedi'', which he produced for the wedding celebrations of the Grand Duke Ferdinando I. Of the six ''intermedi'', which are loosely unified by their dramatization of the marvellous powers of ancient music, Rinuccini was alone responsible for the text of three (nos.2, 3 and 6) and wrote the greater part of two more (nos.1 and 5), to which Bardi also contributed some verses. The third ''intermedio'', which depicts the battle between Apollo and the dragon, later served Rinuccini as the basis for the opening scene of his first operatic text, ''Dafne'', which he claimed to have written ‘solely to test the power of music’. Thus Apollo, god of both music and the sun, by virtue of his power in vanquishing the irrational forces represented by the python, was his first aesthetic spokesman.


During the 1590s Rinuccini was associated with Corsi, who collaborated with [[Jacopo Peri]] in setting ''Dafne'' to music in the newly invented recitative style. First performed at Corsi's home in 1598 and repeated in the following two years, ''Dafne'' was the first drama to be sung in its entirety ‘in the manner of the ancients’. The innovations claimed by Rinuccini and Peri in their prefaces to ''Euridice'' (1600) inspired the rival claims of [[Emilio de Cavalieri|Cavalieri]] and [[Giulio Caccini|Caccini]], neither of whom, however, had written recitative as such before 1600.
During the 1590s Rinuccini was associated with Corsi, who collaborated with [[Jacopo Peri]] in setting ''Dafne'' to music in the newly invented recitative style. First performed at Corsi's home in 1598 and repeated in the following two years, ''Dafne'' was the first drama to be sung in its entirety ‘in the manner of the ancients’. The innovations claimed by Rinuccini and Peri in their prefaces to ''Euridice'' (1600) inspired the rival claims of [[Emilio de Cavalieri|Cavalieri]] and [[Giulio Caccini|Caccini]], neither of whom, however, had written recitative as such before 1600.


In creating the new genre of opera libretto, Rinuccini adopted many conventions from the major lyric poets of his day: [[Torquato Tasso|Tasso]], [[Giovanni Battista Guarini|Guarini]] and Chiabrera. His originality lay in developing a consistent and unique verse style fashioned for a musical setting that was designed to imitate the accents of speech. This style, a compromise between the blank verse typical of spoken tragedy and the uniform metres and close rhymes of traditional lyric forms, consists of an irregular mixture of freely rhyming seven- and eleven-syllable lines able to promote the rhythmic and melodic continuity suited to narrative passages without precluding the more intense lyricism appropriate for dramatically affective passages.
In creating the new genre of opera libretto, Rinuccini adopted many conventions from the major lyric poets of his day: [[Torquato Tasso|Tasso]], [[Giovanni Battista Guarini|Guarini]] and Chiabrera. His originality lay in developing a consistent and unique verse style fashioned for a musical setting that was designed to imitate the accents of speech. This style, a compromise between the blank verse typical of spoken tragedy and the uniform metres and close rhymes of traditional lyric forms, consists of an irregular mixture of freely rhyming seven- and eleven-syllable lines able to promote the rhythmic and melodic continuity suited to narrative passages without precluding the more intense lyricism appropriate for dramatically affective passages.
 
Rinuccini's verse has also been praised for its expressive devices, which include assonance, anaphora, and other types of word and sound repetition capable of conveying emotionally charged sentiments in the Petrarchist manner. Moreover, by adopting Ovidian plots, which themselves reflect the power of art, and through the Prologue and happy ending of ''Euridice'', Rinuccini established a link between the new art form and the tragicomic genre, defended by Guarini as suitable for the purging of melancholy, rather than of pity and fear, as with the ancients. Thus Rinuccini's librettos must not be seen as unsuccessful imitations of classical tragedy but as highly appropriate vehicles through which ‘modern’ music might prove its power to move. That he called his next libretto, ''Arianna'' (1608, set by Monteverdi), a ‘tragedia’ is more a reflection of its pathetic subject than a generic distinction, for it too follows Ovid and resorts at the end to a ‘deus ex machina’, with Ariadne being transported to the heavens.


Rinuccini's association with Monteverdi in Mantua also resulted in the ''Ballo delle Ingrate'' (1608), which reflects the influence of the French court ballet and his periodic sojourns in France between 1600 and 1604 as one of Maria de' Medici's courtiers. Also in 1608 ''Dafne'' was revived in a new setting by [[Marco da Gagliano]], whose Mantuan-based Accademia degli Elevati Rinuccini had joined. However, his last libretto, ''Narciso'', dating from about the same period, did not find a willing composer, and he subsequently wrote only a few minor works in the pastoral vein and some sacred verses in addition to sonnets, canzoni and madrigals (including ''Zefiro torna'' and ''Lamento della ninfa'', famous in Monteverdi's settings). His decline as a librettist was due perhaps more than anything else to the gradual shift of operatic activity before his death away from Florence and Mantua to Rome.
Rinuccini's association with Monteverdi in Mantua also resulted in the ''Ballo delle Ingrate'' (1608), which reflects the influence of the French court ballet and his periodic sojourns in France between 1600 and 1604 as one of Maria de' Medici's courtiers. Also in 1608 ''Dafne'' was revived in a new setting by [[Marco da Gagliano]], whose Mantuan-based Accademia degli Elevati Rinuccini had joined. However, his last libretto, ''Narciso'', dating from about the same period, did not find a willing composer, and he subsequently wrote only a few minor works in the pastoral vein and some sacred verses in addition to sonnets, canzoni and madrigals (including ''Zefiro torna'' and ''Lamento della ninfa'', famous in Monteverdi's settings). His decline as a librettist was due perhaps more than anything else to the gradual shift of operatic activity before his death away from Florence and Mantua to Rome.
The texts of Rinuccini's principal works intended for musical setting appear in Solerti (1904–5, vol.ii).
The texts of Rinuccini's principal works intended for musical setting appear in Solerti (1904–5, vol.ii).


{{LyricistSettingsList}}
==External links==
==External links==
{{WikipediaLink}}
{{WikipediaLink|Ottavio Rinuccini}}


[[Category:Lyricists|Rinuccini, Ottavio]]
[[Category:Lyricists|Rinuccini, Ottavio]]

Latest revision as of 02:32, 8 April 2021

Life

Born: 20 January 1562, Florence

Died: 28 March 1621, Florence

Biography:

Italian poet, courtier and considered as the first librettist. He came from a noble Florentine family prominent in cultural and diplomatic circles since the 13th century. His education was presumably that of a courtier – some classical training and enough exposure to the arts to have made him a lively participant in court entertainments in Florence, for which he began writing verses as early as 1579 (Maschere d'Amazzoni). The court chronicler Bastiano de' Rossi called him ‘a very fine connoisseur’ of music, and G.B. Doni suggested that Monteverdi relied on him greatly while setting his libretto for Arianna.

Works

Already a member of the Accademia Fiorentina, Rinuccini in 1586 joined another Florentine academy, the Alterati, whose members were particularly interested in dramatic theory and music; he took the name ‘Il Sonnacchioso’ (‘the somnolent one’). There is no evidence to affirm Rinuccini's connection with Giovanni de' Bardi's Camerata, but Bardi (like other musical humanists such as Girolamo Mei and Jacopo Corsi) was also a member of the Accademia degli Alterati and collaborated with Rinuccini on the 1589 intermedi, which he produced for the wedding celebrations of the Grand Duke Ferdinando I. Of the six intermedi, which are loosely unified by their dramatization of the marvellous powers of ancient music, Rinuccini was alone responsible for the text of three (nos. 2, 3 and 6) and wrote the greater part of two more (nos. 1 and 5), to which Bardi also contributed some verses. The third intermedio, which depicts the battle between Apollo and the dragon, later served Rinuccini as the basis for the opening scene of his first operatic text, Dafne, which he claimed to have written ‘solely to test the power of music’. Thus Apollo, god of both music and the sun, by virtue of his power in vanquishing the irrational forces represented by the python, was his first aesthetic spokesman.

During the 1590s Rinuccini was associated with Corsi, who collaborated with Jacopo Peri in setting Dafne to music in the newly invented recitative style. First performed at Corsi's home in 1598 and repeated in the following two years, Dafne was the first drama to be sung in its entirety ‘in the manner of the ancients’. The innovations claimed by Rinuccini and Peri in their prefaces to Euridice (1600) inspired the rival claims of Cavalieri and Caccini, neither of whom, however, had written recitative as such before 1600.

In creating the new genre of opera libretto, Rinuccini adopted many conventions from the major lyric poets of his day: Tasso, Guarini and Chiabrera. His originality lay in developing a consistent and unique verse style fashioned for a musical setting that was designed to imitate the accents of speech. This style, a compromise between the blank verse typical of spoken tragedy and the uniform metres and close rhymes of traditional lyric forms, consists of an irregular mixture of freely rhyming seven- and eleven-syllable lines able to promote the rhythmic and melodic continuity suited to narrative passages without precluding the more intense lyricism appropriate for dramatically affective passages.

Rinuccini's association with Monteverdi in Mantua also resulted in the Ballo delle Ingrate (1608), which reflects the influence of the French court ballet and his periodic sojourns in France between 1600 and 1604 as one of Maria de' Medici's courtiers. Also in 1608 Dafne was revived in a new setting by Marco da Gagliano, whose Mantuan-based Accademia degli Elevati Rinuccini had joined. However, his last libretto, Narciso, dating from about the same period, did not find a willing composer, and he subsequently wrote only a few minor works in the pastoral vein and some sacred verses in addition to sonnets, canzoni and madrigals (including Zefiro torna and Lamento della ninfa, famous in Monteverdi's settings). His decline as a librettist was due perhaps more than anything else to the gradual shift of operatic activity before his death away from Florence and Mantua to Rome. The texts of Rinuccini's principal works intended for musical setting appear in Solerti (1904–5, vol.ii).

Settings of text by Ottavio Rinuccini

External links

View the Wikipedia article on Ottavio Rinuccini.