Synopsis
The average music lover, if asked to name some notable Baroque composers, will probably answer Bach, Handel, Telemann or Vivaldi. But decades before most of those composers flourished, a number of bold pioneers of the early Baroque period were busily developing new musical forms and techniques.
Like most composers born before 1700, details about their lives and careers tend to be skimpy at best. Take the case of the Italian composer Marco Uccellini, who was born somewhere in Italy around 1603, and died on today’s date in 1680.
We know (from a little bird) that Uccellini studied in Assisi, and was active in the service of Italian noble families in Modena and Parma. We know he composed operas and ballets for them, but none of that music survives. Uccellini’s lasting claim to fame rests of a series of instrumental works, mainly sonatas for violin, which were published during his lifetime.
The British violinist Andrew Manze, one of the great virtuosos of our day, has recorded some of Uccelini’s Sonatas, and offers this assessment: “Uccellini’s pioneering spirit led him to seek new colors, explore strange keys, and to boldly go higher than any violinist had gone before. His (high) G’’’ was a world record that stood until the Austrian composer Heinrich von Biber squeaked a tone higher in a Violin Sonata published the year after Uccellini’s death in 1680.”
Music Played in Today's Program
Marco Uccellini (1603 – 1680) Aria IX and Corrente XX Romanesca Harmonia Mundi 90.7196
On This Day
Births
1714 - Italian opera composer Niccolo Jommelli, in Aversa (near Naples); He was known as "the Italian Gluck";
1866 - Swedish violinist and composer Tor Aulin, in Stockholm;
1875 - Lithuanian composer Mikolajus Ciurlionis, in Varena (Gregorian date: Sept. 22); His birthday is incorrectly listed as Oct. 4 in many reference works;
Deaths
1680 - Italian composer Marco Uccellini, age c. 77, in Folimpopoli;
Premieres
1838 - Berlioz: opera, "Benvenuto Cellini," at the Paris Opera;
1950 - Karl Amadeus Hartmann: "Adagio" (Symphony No. 2), by the Southwest German Radio Orchestra, Hans Rosbaud conducting;
1955 - Cowell: "Hymn and Fuguing Tune" No. 10 for oboe and strings, in the Sunken Gardens of the Spanish Court House in Santa Barbara, Calif., by oboist Bert Gassman and the strings of the 3rd Annual Pacific Coast Music Festival orchestra, Leopold Stokowski conducting;
1971 - Ginastera: opera "Beatrix Cenci" at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.;
1989 - Peter Maxwell Davies: Symphony No. 4, at a BBC Proms Concert in London's Royal Albert Hall, by the Scottish Chamber Orchestra conducted by the composer;
1998 - Joan Tower: "Wild Purple," for solo viola, at Lincoln Center in New York, by Paul Neubauer.
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About Composers Datebook®
Host John Birge presents a daily snapshot of composers past and present, with timely information, intriguing musical events and appropriate, accessible music related to each.
He has been hosting, producing and performing classical music for more than 25 years. Since 1997, he has been hosting on Minnesota Public Radio's Classical Music Service. He played French horn for the Cincinnati Symphony and Pops Orchestra and performed with them on their centennial tour of Europe in 1995. He was trained at the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, Eastman School of Music and Interlochen Arts Academy.