Giulio Caccini: Difference between revisions

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{{Aliases|Giulio Romano}}
==Life==
==Life==
'''Born:''' 1550
'''Born:''' 8 October 1551


'''Died:''' 10 December 1618
'''Died:''' buried 10 December 1618


'''Biography'''  
'''Biography''' By 1564 Caccini was a treble singer in the ''Cappella Giulia'' in Rome, studying with its maestro di cappella [[Giovanni Animuccia]]. By 1566 he was a resident of Florence and met Giovanni de' Bardi, whose ''Camerata'' included [[Vincenzo Galilei]], [[Jacopo Corsi]] and [[Jacopo Peri]]. The dedication of {{NoCo|Le nuove musiche}} (with a dedication ghostwritten by [[Michelangelo Buonarroti il Giovane|Michelangelo Buonarroti the younger]]) is dated 1601, according to the Florentine reckoning of New Year's from {{CC|Annunciation|March 25}}, and was followed by {{NoCo|Nuove musiche e nuova maniera di scriverle}} in 1614.
 
Giulio Caccini was an Italian composer, father of [[Francesca Caccini]].


Giulio was the father of [[Francesca Caccini]].
{{WikipediaLink}}
{{WikipediaLink}}
==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
{{Legend}}
{{#SortWorks:}}
 
{{ArrangementsList}}
*{{NoCo|Al fonte, al prato}}   ( [{{filepath:Caccini-Al_fonte.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-Al_fonte.MID}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-Al_fonte.MUS}} Finale 2007] )
{{CheckMissing}}
 
*{{NoCo|Amor io parto}}
 
*{{NoCo|Ave Maria}} (misattributed)   ( [{{website|artsong}}2007/caccini-attr-ave-maria/ {{net}}] )
 
*{{NoCo|Amarilli, mia bella}}   {{editions|3}}
 
*{{NoCo|Diteli voi}}   ( [{{filepath:Caccini-diteli.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-diteli.MID}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-diteli.MUS}} Finale 2008] )
 
*{{NoCo|Dolcissimo sospiro}}
 
*{{NoCo|O che felice giorno}}   ( [{{filepath:Caccini-O_che.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-O_che.MID}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Caccini-O_che.MUS}} Finale 2007] )
 
{{Whatlinkshere}}
{{Whatlinkshere}}
==Publications==
==Publications==
* {{NoCo|Le nuove musiche}}


==External links==
==External links==
 
*{{IMSLP}}}
''add web links here''


{{DEFAULTSORT:Caccini, Giulio}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Caccini, Giulio}}
[[Category:1550 births]]
[[Category:1551 births]]
[[Category:1618 deaths]]
[[Category:1618 deaths]]
[[Category:Composers]]
[[Category:Composers]]
[[Category:Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Italian composers]]
[[Category:Italian composers]]

Revision as of 02:55, 23 October 2022

Alias: Giulio Romano

Life

Born: 8 October 1551

Died: buried 10 December 1618

Biography By 1564 Caccini was a treble singer in the Cappella Giulia in Rome, studying with its maestro di cappella Giovanni Animuccia. By 1566 he was a resident of Florence and met Giovanni de' Bardi, whose Camerata included Vincenzo Galilei, Jacopo Corsi and Jacopo Peri. The dedication of Le nuove musiche (with a dedication ghostwritten by Michelangelo Buonarroti the younger) is dated 1601, according to the Florentine reckoning of New Year's from March 25, and was followed by Nuove musiche e nuova maniera di scriverle in 1614.

Giulio was the father of Francesca Caccini.

View the Wikipedia article on Giulio Caccini.

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

External links