Background
Giacomo Carissimi was born in Marino near Rome, Italy and baptized on April 18, 1605.
(Giacomo Carissimi was one of the most admired of seventee...)
Giacomo Carissimi was one of the most admired of seventeenth-century Italian composers. The maestro from Marino, near Rome, acquired a Europe-wide fame at an early age and excelled in church music. Commonly employing texts that modify or amplify passages from the scriptures, rather than taking those texts verbatim, Carissimi employed all his genius for vocal melodic lines and accompanying instrumentation to fashion a sequence of spellbinding masterpieces. Foremost among these is Usquequo peccatores which, through its size and length, blurs the very distinction between motet and oratorio. This is the fourth Naxos release of music by Carissimi from this ensemble.
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(Two of Carissimi's most famous oratorios, performed by ea...)
Two of Carissimi's most famous oratorios, performed by early music ensemble New Trinity Baroque in collaboration with the Choir of Oxford College (The Oxford Chorale) led by Predrag Gosta.
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(A master of the early Italian baroque era, Giacomo Cariss...)
A master of the early Italian baroque era, Giacomo Carissimi was born into a large and tragically poor family in Marino, and was baptized on April 18th, 1605. Whilst details of his youth and early musical training are unclear, he became a member of the Tivoli Cathedral Choir at the age of 18, and was later (in 1625) appointed organist. Throughout his career he appears to have received a number of offers to take up notable positions within the Italian music industry. In his role as maestro di cappella responsible for the musical education of the choristers and composing works suitable to the church's calendar Carissimi was to shun the increasingly popular taste for purely instrumental music, which was gathering momentum in early 17th century Italy. His musical abilities would instead lend themselves to two legacies: as a musical tutor through his compositions, his influence was to spread far and wide, saturating even the works of the French master Marc-Antoine Charpentier with its innovative style; and, more importantly, he was to become the true pioneer of the oratorio genre. If the evolution from cantata to oratorio was itself something of a natural transition, then Carissimi's specific musical inputs should be noted as defining features of a form that was, a century later through the likes of Handel, one of the most popular outlets for European composers.
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(Giacomo Carissimi may not exactly be a household name, bu...)
Giacomo Carissimi may not exactly be a household name, but during his time he was one of the most respected musicians in Europe. Born in 1605, he avoided becoming a cooper, unlike the rest of his family, cultivating his musical talent first as a singer, then organist, and eventually chapel master. He enjoyed a succession of positions at various religious institutions in his native Italy, including the church of the Jesuit Collegium Germanicum in Rome -- which, under his guidance, was transformed into an international centre. Now regarded as the grandfather of modern European music, Carissimi was essentially responsible for the forging of a new medium of ecclesiastical expression and it is to his cultivation of this genre that this compilation is dedicated
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Giacomo Carissimi was born in Marino near Rome, Italy and baptized on April 18, 1605.
Nothing is known of his early musical training.
In 1622 or 1623 Carissimi became a singer at the Cathedral of Tivoli, and from 1624 to 1627 he worked as organist there. He was chapelmaster at the church of S. Rufino in Assisi from 1628 to 1629. He was then appointed chapelmaster at the church of S. Apollinare in Rome and was simultaneously put in charge of musical instruction at the German College, an adjoining institution. Carissimi remained in this double position until his death on January 12, 1674.
He declined numerous invitations to other posts, and it seems that he never left Rome after 1630. His music was performed throughout Italy and abroad during his lifetime and well into the 18th century. The extant works of Carissimi include 17 oratorios, about 150 chamber cantatas (that is, to Italian words), over 200 motets (to Latin words), at least 12 Masses, various liturgical works, some humorous Latin pieces, and a treatise on music. One or two pieces for instruments may be by Carissimi. But his music is virtually all for voices with instrumental accompaniment. Of Carissimi's oratorios 15 are in Latin and 2 are in Italian. The majority are set to texts dealing with subjects from the Old Testament, and many include a part for a narrator, called the testo. His best-known oratorio is Jephthe, composed by 1649 at the latest, which is a masterpiece of expressive writing in both its solo and choral portions. Most of Carissimi's chamber cantatas, in Italian, are for solo soprano voice and basso continuo; the remainder are for two or three voices and basso continuo. They are built of sections in recitative, arioso and aria style, which proceed in a manner at once varied and unified. The great majority are set to poems on amorous subjects, but some of the poems are religious in content and others are humorous. Carissimi's cantatas excel for their superb word setting and high musical quality. In his Latin motets Carissimi used essentially the same forms and styles as in his Italian cantatas. His Masses reveal his firm mastery of contrapuntal writing in the then traditional church style.
His oratorios and chamber cantatas are of high importance musically and historically. Both directly, through his teaching at the German College, and indirectly, through the numerous copies made of his music, Carissimi was a leading influence on contemporary and later composers in Italy, France, Germany, and England.
(Two of Carissimi's most famous oratorios, performed by ea...)
(A master of the early Italian baroque era, Giacomo Cariss...)
(Giacomo Carissimi may not exactly be a household name, bu...)
(Le Jugement de Salomon - Job - Oratorio de la Sainte Vier...)
(Giacomo Carissimi was one of the most admired of seventee...)