Giuseppe Sammartini
Giuseppe Baldassare Sammartini (also Gioseffo, S Martini, St Martini, San Martini, San Martino, Martini, Martino;[1] 6 January 1695 – November 1750) was an Italian composer and oboist during the late Baroque and early Classical era. Although he was from Milan, most of his professional life was spent in London and with Frederick, the Prince of Wales.
Personal life
Giuseppe Sammartini was born in Milan, Italy. He had a younger brother, Giovanni Battista Sammartini, who also became a particularly renowned composer and oboist. Both brothers took oboe lessons from their French father Alexis Saint-Martin.[2] Although born in Milan, Giuseppe found his success in other parts of Europe. His first trip was to Brussels, and from there he made his way to London where he would go on to spend the rest of his life. Giuseppe did return to Milan for his sister Madalena’s marriage on 13 February 1728.[3] In July of 1728 Giuseppe also travelled to Brussels with his pupil Gaetano Parenti.[4]
Performer
Sammartini was an exceptionally skilled oboist. He could play the flute and recorder, as was customary at the time.[5] Before moving to London, Giuseppe was the oboist at S. Celso in Milan around 1717. He then became the oboist at the Regio Ducal Teatro in 1720. He even gained fame in London as “the greatest [oboist] the world had ever known.”[6] He performed in places such as Lincoln's Inn Fields, Hickford’s Room, Castle concerts, and in the opera orchestra at the King’s Theatre.[7] As an oboist, Giuseppe was unbelievably successful, and significantly advanced the level of oboe playing. Giuseppe was even able to make the oboe sound voice-like at times. One of his most notable students was the Englishman Thomas Vincent.[8]
Composer
He was well versed in the ways of counterpoint and proper harmony. This made him a very skilled composer of his time. One of Giuseppe’s first published collections was a set of 12 trio sonatas. It was published in London by Walsh & Hare.[9] Sammartini’s career as a composer advanced when he was hired as the music master for the Prince of Wales, Frederick, and his wife Augusta. He worked for them and their children from 1736 until his death in 1750.[10] While working for the family, Sammartini dedicated many works to the different members of the family. His 12 sonatas op. 1 were dedicated to Frederick, and his 12 trios op. 3 to Augusta. Sammartini was clearly very attached to this family, writing everything from these wonderful collections to simple birthday tunes for the children.
Most of Sammartini’s chamber music was played and re-published regularly during his life. However, many of the concertos and overtures that Sammartini wrote were not published until after his death, but then gained wide acceptance, even more than other Italian composers such as Corelli.[11]
Musical style
Although Sammartini wrote in a later Baroque style, he also incorporated many Classical elements.[12] Sammartini was forward thinking as a composer, and even used ideas such as a galant style and “Sturm und Drang,” (the idea of extreme and stormy emotions).[13] Sammartini had other clearly forward thinking musical trends.[14] An example of this would be the number of movements in some of his concertos and symphonies. Being primarily an instrumental composer, Sammartini wrote a significant amount of solo sonatas. Due to his professional instrument, many of these sonatas were written for the flute, recorder, and oboe. One of his unique idioms was starting a sonata with a slow movement. His larger orchestral works often featured four to five movements with slow transitional movements. Giuseppe Sammartini was one of the first composers to write keyboard concertos in England,[15] causing him to be an exceptionally influential composer for his time.[16]
Works
24 sonatas for flute and bass, 30 trios for flutes or violins, 24 concerti grossi, 4 keyboard concertos, 1 oboe concerto, 16 overtures, some cello sonatas, some flute duets.
Sammartini’s most famous piece is without question his Recorder Concerto in F.
Notes
- ↑ Bathia Churgin. "Giuseppe Sammartini". In Macy, Laura. Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. (subscription required)
- ↑ Bathia Churgin, Dictionary of Music and Musicians, S.v. “Giuseppe Sammartini,” New York: Grove’s Dictionaries Inc., 2001, 22: 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Bathia Churgin, “G. B. Sammartini and the Symphony,” The Musical Times 116/1583 (1975): 27.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
- ↑ Paul Everett, “Releasing the Energy in Italian Instrumental Music: Corelli, Locatelli and Sammartini Twelve concerti grossi op. 6 by Arcangelo Corelli; Brandenburg Consort; Roy Goodman; Introduttioni teatrali by Pietro Antonio Locatelli; Freiburger Barockorchester; Thomas Hengelbrock; Sonatas by Giuseppe Battista Sammartini; Giovanni Battista Sammartini; Camerata Köln,” Early Music 22/3 (1994): 523.
- ↑ Roy Pascal, “The ‘Sturm und Drang’ Movement,” The Modern Language Review 47/2 (1952): 129.
- ↑ Everett, “Releasing the Energy in Italian Instrumental Music,” 525.
- ↑ Bathia Churgin. "Sammartini, Giuseppe." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, accessed January 6, 2014, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/24464.
- ↑ Churgin, “Giuseppe Sammartini,” 215.
References
- Brown, A. Peter. “Approaching Musical Classicism: Understanding Styles and Style Change in Eighteenth-Century Instrumental Music.” College Music Symposium vol 20, no 1 (1980): 7-48.
- Churgin, Bathia. Dictionary of Music and Musicians, S.v. “Giuseppe Sammartini,” New York: Grove’s Dictionaries Inc., 2001, 22:215.
- Churgin, Bathia. “G. B. Sammartini and the Symphony.” The Musical Times vol. 116, no. 1583 (1975): 26-29.
- Churgin, Bathia. “New Facts in Sammartini Biography: The Authentic Print of the String Trios, Op. 7.” Journal of the American Musicological Society vol 20, no 1 (1967): 107-112.
- Churgin, Bathia. “The Symphonies of G. B. Sammartini. Vol I: The Early Symphonies by Giovanni Battista Sammartini: Bathia Churgin.” Journal of the American Musicological Society vol 26, no 1 (1973): 164-167.
- Everett, Paul. “Releasing the Energy in Italian Instrumental Music: Corelli, Locatelli and Sammartini Twelve concerti grossi op. 6 by Arcangelo Corelli; Brandenburg Consort; Roy Goodman; Introduttioni teatrali by Pietro Antonio Locatelli; Freiburger Barockorchester; Thomas Hengelbrock; Sonatas by Giuseppe Battista Sammartini; Giovanni Battista Sammartini; Camerata Köln.” Early Music vol. 22, no. 3 (1994): 523+525.
- Ng, Samuel. “Phrase Rhythm as Form in Classical Instrumental Music.” Music Theory Spectrum vol 34, no 1 (2012): 51-77.
- Page, Janet. “The Hautboy in London’s Musical Life, 1730-1770.” Early Music vol. 16, no. 3 (1988): 358-371.
- Pascal, Roy. “The ‘Sturm und Drang’ Movement.” The Modern Language Review vol. 47, no. 2 (1952): 129-151.
- Rushton, Julian. “Christoph Willibald Gluck, 1714-87: The Musician Gluck.” The Musical Times vol. 128, no. 1737 (1987): 615-618.
- Sadie, Julie Anne, ed. Companion to Baroque Music. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1990.
- Snodgrass Gifford, Virginia. Music for Oboe, Oboe D’Amore, and English Horn: A Bibliography of Materials at the Library of Congress. Westport CT: Greenwood Press, 1983.
- Stauffer, George, ed. The world of Baroque music: New perspectives. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press, 2006.
- Talbot, Michael. “The Concerto Allegro in the Early Eighteenth Century II.” Music & Letters vol 52, no. 2 (1971): 159-172.
- Zohn, Steven. “The Baroque Concerto in Theory and Practice.” The Journal of Musicology vol. 26, no. 4 (2009): 566-594.
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