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Arcangelo Corelli (1653–1713)

Author of Corelli: 12 Concerti Grossi, Op. 6

296+ Works 515 Members 33 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Arcangelo Corelli

Concerti Grossi, Op. 6, Nos. 1-6 [sound recording] (1991) — Composer — 14 copies, 1 review
Italian Baroque Concertos [sound recording] (2001) — Composer — 7 copies, 1 review
Concerti Grossi (2004) 6 copies
Italian Oboe Concertos [sound recording] (1997) — Composer — 5 copies
Concerti Grossi 7-12 (1991) 5 copies
Corelli Complete Edition (2010) 3 copies
Baroque 2 copies
6 Concerti Grossi (1991) 2 copies
Vivace 2 copies
Violinsonaten op. 5 (2003) 2 copies
Trio Sonatas Op. 1 (1-3) (1985) 2 copies
Follia 2 copies, 1 review
An 18th Century Christmas (1988) 2 copies
Scenes 1 copy
Tippett / Holst / Corelli / Bach (1994) — Composer — 1 copy
Gigue 1 copy
Compositores 1 copy, 1 review
Complete Works (1900) 1 copy
The Art of the Violin (2009) 1 copy
Der Cid 1 copy
Concerto Grosso Op. 6 No. 1 1 copy, 1 review
Little Pieces (2003) 1 copy
Sonata VIII 1 copy
Adagio and allegro [score] — Composer — 1 copy
Violin Sonatas Op 5 (2003) 1 copy
La Folia [score] (1985) — Composer — 1 copy
Concerto XII 1 copy
Trio Sonata, Op. 3, No.2 1 copy, 1 review
Sarabande and allegro [score] — Composer — 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Corelli, Arcangelo
Birthdate
1653-02-17
Date of death
1713-01-08
Gender
male
Occupations
composer
violinist
Short biography
From New York City Ballet: Arcangelo Corelli, considered by some to be the founder of modern violin technique, was born in Fusignano, Italy, in 1653. He trained in Bologna and moved to Rome in or shortly before 1675, where he enjoyed the successive patronage of Queen Christina of Sweden, Cardinal Pamphili, and Cardinal Ottoboni. Corelli toured extensively in Europe as a violinist, establishing the instrument's popularity and gathering fame for himself. His six published collections of sonatas and concertos were equally successful; his innovative development of the concerto grosso form and the trio sonata influenced future generations of composers throughout all Europe. Corelli died a wealthy man at age 59 in Rome.
Nationality
Italy
Birthplace
Fusignano, Italy
Places of residence
Bologna, Italy
Rome, Italy
Place of death
Rome, Italy
Associated Place (for map)
Italy

Members

Reviews

39 reviews
The sonatas of Corelli represent the highest point of perfection in this form. Born in 1653 at Fusignano near Bologna, Arcangelo Corelli played a capital part in the evolution of Italian music. From his teachers, Giovanni Benvenuti and Leonardo Brugnoli, he had acquired all the accomplished technique of the Venetians. His profound musical culture and the uncompromising purity of his taste made him fully aware of the dangers of virtuosity considered as an end in itself. He established a show more violin technique based on the imitation of the purest form of singing, a technique so rational and so well organised that it has been the basis of teaching in all schools of violin-playing ever since. Corelli was the founder of the first classical school of violin-playing, and thereby made possible the development of an instrumental art without which none of the great classical forms could ever have come into being. Few works have ever been the subject of such long and deep meditation, as those of Corelli. During a life of normal length (he died in 1713) he published in all only two books of 'Church trios' Op. I and 3 ( 1681 and 1689), two of 'chamber' trios Op. 2 and 4 ( 1685 and 1694), one of sonatas for violin and bass, the famous Op. 5 ( 1700) which ran into more than 30 editions in the course of the century, and one of concertos, Op. 6 ( 1714, posthumous). No music for the theatre and no vocal music of any kind.

Corelli's inspiration is of unfailing nobility and purity, while his sober and restrained style of writing combines in an effortless way traditional counterpoint with accompanied melody. The modern major-minor tonality holds undisputed sway in all his music. He was not its "inventor" as has been somewhat too lightly asserted, but he affirmed and established it more decisively than any of his predecessors by the way in which he modulates around an initial tonality.

None of his sonata-movements shows the opposition between two themes which was to be the essence of the classical sonata. One theme predominates in each piece, sometimes so completely as to provide the whole of the material, sometimes engendering, by imitation, accessory themes and sequences. The movements are sometimes enlivened, after the fashion of the divertissements in a fugue, by virtuoso passages of a deliberately sober character, far removed from the acrobatics indulged in by an Uccellini or, again, as found in the works of the old Austro-German School.

Corelli also played an important part in the development of the concerto grosso.
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This is bound photocopies of the Folia variations from Corelli's Op. 5.
Facsimile of MS transcription of Corelli's Op. 5 for viola da gamba. Transcription was probably done in the 18th century in Northern Germany.

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Associated Authors

Nicholas Ward Conductor

Statistics

Works
296
Also by
12
Members
515
Popularity
#48,204
Rating
4.2
Reviews
33
ISBNs
33
Languages
6

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