Giancarlo Rostirolla

La Cappella Giulia 1513-2013

Five Centuries of Sacred Muisc in San Pietro
Volume I + II

Musical Editions:
Book (Hardcover)
Item no.:
772605
Author / Composer:
Language:
italian
Scope:
1564 pages; 24.5 × 17.5 cm
Release year:
2017
Publisher / Producer:
Producer No.:
BVK 2137
ISBN:
9783761821374

Description

One of the major institutions of sacred music, the Cappella Giulia at St. Peter's Basilica, can look back on a five-hundred-year history. Now Giancarlo Rostirolla brings this turbulent and spellbinding history to life using original documents from the Papal Library and the chapter archives of Saint Peter in the Vatican.

The Cappella Giulia was founded by Pope Julius II in 1513. Its chapel masters were the most important representatives of Roman vocal polyphony, above all Giovanni Animuccia and Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Francesco Soriano, Virgilio Mazzocchi, Orazio Benevoli, Paolo Lorenzani and Pietro Bencini. Also employed there were such opera composers as Domenico Scarlatti, Niccolò Jommelli and Nicola Zingarelli, the proponents of Italian Cecilianism up to Armando Renzi, and such renowned organists as Girolamo Frescobaldi.

In this documentary history, as comprehensive as it is exciting to read, Giancarlo Rostirolla pays tribute to the Cappella Giulia as a musical institution of extraordinary historical importance and the vehicle for half a millennium of sacred music. For decades the author, an internationally acclaimed authority on Rome's musical traditions, has immersed himself like few others in the church and chapel archives, libraries and music collections of the Eternal City.

– For the first time these two volumes explore the history of the Cappella Giulia with information on all the musicians known to have worked there, together with their biographies, lists of compositions and documents on the chapel's history.

Content

  • ​Volume I:
  • ​Prefazione
  • ​Introduzione
  • ​Il periodo precedente all'istituzione della Cappella Giulia (secoli XV–XVI)
  • ​Dalla fondazione fino al 1524
  • ​La Cappella Giulia durante i pontificati di Leone X, Adriano VI e Clemente VII. Jacobus »flandrus« maestro dei ›pueri cantores‹
  • ​Il calendario liturgico-musicale. Francesco Rosselli, »Giovanni Battista«, Domenico Maria Ferrabosco, Rubino Mallapert responsabili musicali
  • ​Il primo periodo di magistero di Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
  • ​Giovanni Animuccia succede a Palestrina (1555–1571)
  • ​Il secondo periodo di Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1571–1594)
  • ​Ruggero Giovannelli successore di Palestrina – La ›coadiutoria‹ Crivelli (1594–1599
  • ​Il magistero di Stefano Fabri (1599–1601)
  • ​Asprilio Pacelli a San Pietro (1602)
  • ​Il periodo di Francesco Soriano (1603–1621)
  • ​Vincenzo Ugolini maestro della Cappella Giulia (1620–1626)
  • ​Il breve magistero di Paolo Agostini (1626–1629)
  • ​Il periodo di Virgilio Mazzocchi (1629–1646)
  • ​Orazio Benevoli alla guida della Cappella Giulia (1646–1672)
  • ​ll magistero di Ercole Bernabei (1672–1674)
  • ​Il periodo di Antonio Masini (1674–1678)
  • ​Francesco Beretta a San Pietro (1678–1694)
  • ​Gli anni di Paolo Lorenzani (1694 / 1695–1713)
  • ​Tommaso Baj il »più antico musico di San Pietro« alla guida della Cappella Giulia (1713–1714)
  • ​Domenico Scarlatti a San Pietro (1716–1719)
  • ​ll magistero di Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni (1719–1743)
  • ​Pietro Paolo Bencini maestro (1743–1755), Niccolò Jommelli sostituto (1750–1754)
  • ​Giovanni Battista Costanzi maestro vaticano (1755–1778)
  • ​Dal mondo del melodramma: Antonio Boroni (1778–1792)
  • ​Il magistero di Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi (1793–1804)
  • ​Volume II:
  • ​Il periodo di Niccolò Zingarelli (1805–1812)
  • ​Giuseppe Jannacconi a San Pietro (1812–1816)
  • ​Valentino Fioravanti succede a Jannacconi (1816–1837)
  • ​Dal' »imperial regio« Conservatorio di Milano a Roma: Francesco Basili (1837–1850)
  • ​Pietro Raimondi alla guida della Cappella (1852–1853)
  • ​Da San Giovanni a San Pietro: Salvatore Meluzzi alla Cappella Giulia (1854–1897)
  • ​Andrea Meluzzi erede del magistero in San Pietro (1897–1905)
  • ​Dalla consolle di San Luigi dei Francesi alla cantoria vaticana: Ernesto Boezi (1905–1946)
  • ​Armando Antonelli da maestro sostituto (1927–1947) a maestro di cappella (1947–1960)
  • ​Il magistero di Armando Renzi (1960–1979)
  • ​La carriera musicale di un cantore della Cappella: Domenico Mancini
  • ​Monsignor Pablo Colino maestro della ›Cappella Musicale della Basilica di San Pietro‹ (1980–2006)
  • ​Il magistero di padre Pierre Paul OMV (2007–2016)
  • ​Abbreviazioni e sigle
  • ​Bibliografia
  • ​Illustrazioni
  • ​Indice dei nomi di persona
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