Maria Teresa Agnesi Pinottini

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Maria Teresa Agnesi (October 17, 1720 January 19, 1795) was an Italian composer. Though she was most famous for her compositions, she was also an accomplished harpsichordist and singer, and the majority of her surviving compositions were written for keyboard, the voice, or both. She was born in Milan to Pietro Agnesi, an overbearing man in the lesser nobility. He provided early education for both Maria Teresa and her more famous older sister, Maria Gaetana, a mathematics and language prodigy who lectured and debated all over Europe while her sister performed. Maria Teresa was married to Pier Antonio Pinottini on June 13, 1752, and they settled in a district populated by intellects and artists, but eventually suffered severe financial ruin. Pinottini died not too long afterwards.

Career

Not much is known about Maria Teresa. Nothing is known of her education or teachers, and the dates of her compositions are largely unknown. Many of her compositions have been lost, although there are records of their existence. Her career was made possible by the Austrian Lombardy, which proved progressive and enlightened in women’s rights. The movement was more prevalent in Vienna and Dresden rather than her hometown of Milan, and Maria Teresa found more success and more appreciative audiences in these cities than in her birthplace.

Maria Teresa had several famous performances, perhaps the most famous on July 16, 1739, when famous French traveler Charles de Brosses was very impressed by her music. He was not the only one; the Count Gerolamo Riccati wrote several letters praising her compositions and musical talent. Another very famous performance was her theatrical debut, the Cantata Pastorale Il Ristoro d'Arcadia, in Milan at the Teatro Regio Ducal in 1747 where she dedicated her piece to various rulers of the surrounding areas of Saxony and Austria. Agnesi would enjoy the patronage of Maria Theresia, holy Roman Empress and sovereign of Lombardy, and Maria Antonia Walpurgis, a gifted composer and contemporary. The Roman Empress was said to have sung at Maria Teresa Agnesi’s famous 1747 performance.

Legacy and Influence

Today her music is seldom performed. Her keyboard music, while often technically challenging, is said to have been somewhat hackneyed and not distinctive[citation needed]. Her work does seem to have matured throughout her career; her early works are simple and clean, while her later works are more virtuosic, complex, and melodramatic.

Operas and Other Works

Dramatic Works (for Opera)

  • II Restauro di Arcadia (cant. pastorale, G. Riviera), Milan, Teatro Regio Ducal, 1747 (lost)
  • La Sofonisba (dramma eroico, 3, G.F. Zanetti)
  • Ciro in Armenia (dramma serio, 3, ? Agnesi), Milan, Teatro Regio Ducal, 26 Dec 1753, Act 3 frags.
  • Il re pastore (dramma serio, 3, P. Metastasio), ?1755
  • La Insubria Consolata (Componimento drammatico, 2), Milan, 1766-Nitocri (dramma serio, 3, A. Zeno), Act 2 frags.
  • Ulisse in Campania (serenata, 2)

Other (Keyboard, Small Ensemble, Voice)

  • 12 arias, S, 2
  • Aria en Murki: Still, stille Mann!,
  • 4 concs. (F, F, F, D) (str pts missing in A-Wn, D-Dl), 1 cited in 1766 Breitkopf catalogue
  • Sonata, G, cited in 1767 Breitkopf catalogue (1998)
  • Sonata, F (1992)
  • Allegro ou Presto
  • Allemande militare & Menuetto grazioso, kbd (with special stops), ed. F. Brodszky, -Thesaurus Musicus, xvii (1962)
  • Lost: conc., Eâ, hpd, cited in 1766 Breitkopf catalogue; sonata, G, kbd, cited in 1767Breitkopf catalogue; Airs divers

Discography

  • Hofkomponistinnen in Europa: Aus Boudoir und Gärten, Vol. 2
  • Sonata for Harpsichord in G Major
  • CD “Note Femminill”-Concerto

References

External links

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