|  | Claudio Monteverdi 1567
			-1643  
 Born: Cremona, (baptized May 15, 1567. Died: Venice, November 29, 1643
 The son of a doctor, Monteverdi studied music at the town cathedral in Cremona, and
			attained his first position as composer and instrumentalist at the court of the Duke
			Vincenzo Gonzaga of Mantua in 1591. In 1599 he married a singer at the court, Claudia
			de Cattaneis. The couple had three children before her untimely death in 1607. The
			composer remained a widower for the rest of his life. Although unhappy and grossly
			underpaid in Mantua, Monteverdi remained there until the death of Vincenzo in 1612,
			when he was relieved of his duties by the new duke. Soon after however, he was invited
			to serve as maestro di cappella at the Basilica of St. Mark in Venice, an extremely
			prestigious post. Monteverdi remained in Venice until his death in 1643.
 
 Although required by his employers to compose much sacred music throughout his career,
			Monteverdi seemed most happy (and his art in greatest evidence) with secular music.
			Monteverdi composed and published dozens of madrigals throughout his life, and Zefiro
			torna is an excellent example of his art in that secular form. In this madrigal,
			Monteverdi uses the common technique of spinning out the melodic lines, one after
			the other, over a repeated bass figure. One of Monteverdi's undoubted sacred masterpieces
			are the Vespers of the Blessed Virgin, composed in 1610. Monteverdi's settings here
			vary between Renaissance polyphony and the newer homophonic sound of the Baroque.
			He was a master of both forms. The power and fervor of the writing can be heard in
			the "Lauda Jerusalem" from the Vespers of 1610, with the sound of instruments
			added to the choir.
 
 Internationally famous through the publication of his madrigals, Monteverdi scaled
			new artistic heights with the composition of his operas. His first was L'Orfeo, called
			by the composer a "fable in music," and was composed for the court of Duke
			Vincenzo in 1607. Many operas followed, but the music to them is unfortunately lost.
			Monteverdi's final opera, written in 1642 when he was in his seventies, remains one
			of the landmarks of the new genre and his undisputed masterwork. Although the manuscripts
			that have survived consist only of the bass line and vocal parts, comprising mostly
			dramatic recitativo (melodic declamations over the bass, to which the instrumentalists
			fill in appropriate harmonies), the ensemble passages are of exceptional beauty.
			The frankly erotic moments between Nero (originally a part for a castrato) and Poppea
			(soprano) contain music that can still move and amaze modern audiences, as can be
			heard in the final duet, "Pur ti miro" from L'Incoronazione di Poppea.
			Opera remained popular throughout the Baroque age, culminating in the stage works
			of George Frideric Handel.
 
 With his death in 1643, Monteverdi's music fell into oblivion, as it was the nature
			of the times to perform only the very newest music. (Public concerts as we know them
			did not generally come about until the musical scholarship of the nineteenth century.)
			With the early music movements of the twentieth century and the rediscovery of his
			madrigals and sacred music, Claudio Monteverdi has at last been recognized as one
			of the true masters of Western music.
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