Alessandro Striggio

Alessandro Striggio

Alessandro Striggio (c. 1536/1537 – February 29, 1592) was an Italian composer, instrumentalist and diplomat of the Renaissance. He composed numerous madrigals as well as dramatic music, and by combining the two, became the inventor of madrigal comedy. His son, also named Alessandro Striggio, [http://www.answers.com/topic/alessandro-striggio-ii] wrote the libretto for Monteverdi's "Orfeo".

Life

Striggio senior was born in Mantua, evidently to an aristocratic family. Records of his early life are sparse, but he must have gone to Florence as a young man, since he had become well-connected to the Medici by about 1560; in 1567 they sent him on a diplomatic mission to England. Throughout the 1560s Striggio composed numerous intermedi for the Medici, for weddings, visits, and other state occasions. In the 1570s he continued to work for the Medici, but there is some evidence he began to travel away from Florence. He had some connection to the Bavarian court in Munich, and may have gone there on more than one occasion (possibly for the performance of his 40-voice motet "Ecce beatam lucem" which he wrote for a royal marriage there). He became friends with Vincenzo Galilei, the father of the astronomer, during the 1570s; whether or not he was a member of the Florentine Camerata is uncertain.

During the 1580s he began an association with the Este court in Ferrara. Ferrara was one of Italy's avant-garde centers of musical composition in the 1580s and 1590s, and Striggio composed music in the progressive madrigal style he heard there, evidently commissioned by the Medici. This music unfortunately is lost. In 1586 Striggio moved to Mantua where he remained for the rest of his life, although he retained a close association with the Medici, composing music for them at least as late as 1589.

Works

Striggio wrote both sacred and secular music, and all his surviving music is vocal, although sometimes with instrumental accompaniment. He published seven books of madrigals, in addition to two versions of his most famous composition, the madrigal comedy "Il cicalamento delle donne al bucato et la caccia..." ("The gossip of the women at the laundry").

The madrigal comedy, either invented by Striggio or made famous by him, was long considered to be a forerunner of opera, but contemporary musicological scholarship tends to see this as just one of many strands in late 16th century Italian music which adapt prevailing musical forms to dramatic presentation. In the madrigal comedy, there is no acting: the 15 individual madrigals in "cicalamento" tell a story, but entirely in words and music. Entertainments such as the madrigal comedy were not far different from other musical forms one could see at a contemporary intermedio.

One of his most impressive works, and one of the most impressive achievements in Renaissance polyphony, is his motet "Ecce beatam lucem" for 40 independent voices, which may have been performed in 1568 in Munich. [Iain Fenlon, Grove online] There is some evidence that he may have had the music for either this piece or his 40/60 voice mass with him on his diplomatic visit to London in 1567, since Thomas Tallis seems to have been inspired and challenged by it, and shortly afterwards wrote his own 40-voice tour-de-force "Spem in alium", commissioned by the Earl of Leicester for Queen Elizabeth. Unlike the setting by Tallis, Striggio specifically indicates for the voices to be doubled by instruments. In the Bavarian performance in 1568 of Striggio's motet the forces included eight flutes, eight violas, eight trombones, harpsichord and bass lute. The motet is a polychoral composition for four choirs, which include sixteen, ten, eight and six voices respectively, all spatially separated.

A work on a yet larger scale, and long reputed to be lost, is Striggio's mass composed in 40 parts, and which included a 60-voice setting of the final "Agnus Dei". The work was recently unearthed by Berkeley musicologist Davitt Moroney and identified as a parody mass, "Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno", and received its first modern performance at the Royal Albert Hall during the London Proms on 17 July 2007 by the BBC Singers and The Tallis Scholars conducted by Moroney. This work was most likely composed in 1565/6, and carried by Striggio on a journey across Europe in late winter and spring 1567, for performances at Mantua, Munich and Paris. [Moroney, p. 8-16]

Striggio was highly influential, as can be seen by the wide distribution of his music in Europe in the late 16th century. His influence was especially large in England; this may have been due in part to his 1567 visit, and also may have been related to the activities of Alfonso Ferrabosco, the Italian madrigalist who was resident in England for most of his life, and helped popularize the Italian style there.

References and further reading

*Iain Fenlon: "Alessandro Striggio", in "The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians", ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
*Iain Fenlon: "Alessandro Striggio", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed April 21, 2007), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
*Gustave Reese, "Music in the Renaissance". New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
*Iain Fenlon and Hugh Keyte, 'Early Music' July 1980. Reference in CD liner notes to "Spem in Alium" by Tallis Scholars, Gimell CDGIM 006.
*Davitt Moroney, "Alessandro Striggio's Mass in Forty and Sixty Parts". Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 60 No. 1., pp. 1-69. Spring 2007. ISSN 0003-0139

Notes

Internet links

*BBC website for the [http://www.bbc.co.uk/proms/ Proms] , listing the first performance of Striggio's " [http://www.bbc.co.uk/proms/2007/whatson/1707.shtml#prom6 Missa Ecco si beato giorno] " since the sixteenth century.
* [http://www.gresham.ac.uk/event.asp?PageId=39&EventId=613 "The Pope, the Emperor and the Grand Duke"] , lecture by Moroney on the piece at Gresham College, 18 June 2007 (available for download as an audio or video file, as well as a text file)
* [http://www.cpdl.org/wiki/index.php/Alessandro_Striggio Choral Public Domain Library] website, offering several works by Striggio, including the 40-part motet "Ecce beatam lucem".


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  • Alessandro Striggio der Jüngere — Alessandro Striggio, genannt der Jüngere (* 1573 in Mantua; † 8. Juni 1630 in Venedig) war ein italienischer Dichter, Librettist und Diplomat. Er war der Sohn des Komponisten Alessandro Striggio des Älteren. Sein bekanntestes Werk ist das… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Alessandro Striggio der Ältere — Alessandro Striggio, genannt der Ältere (* um 1536/37 in Mantua; † 29. Februar 1592 ebendort) war ein italienischer Komponist, Instrumentalist und Diplomat der Renaissancezeit. Er komponierte zahlreiche Madrigale und Bühnenmusiken. Beide Genres… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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