Composer
Alessandro Grandi (ca. 1577-1630); ITA
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Alessandro Grandi is considered by many the most important Italian composer, after Monteverdi, from the first half of the 16th century. He is best known for his church music, secular cantatas and arias.
Grandi may have been born in Ferrara or in the vicinity of Venice, but almost certainly not in Sicily as once claimed. Not much is known about his early years, but his activities began to emerge more clearly as the 17th century approached: between the late-1590s (1597-1600) and 1617 he held at least four positions of note.
The first (maestro di cappella) was at a religious fraternity in Ferrara, the Accademia della Morte, while the second, at San Marco Church in Venice, was as giovane di coro, beginning around 1605; the third (maestro di cappella), beginning in 1609-10, at the Accademia dello Spirito Santo, another religious fraternity in Ferrara; and the final one (maestro di cappella) was at the Ferrara Cathedral, from 1615 to 1617.
In the midst of this activity Grandi published his first volume of motets (1610). The influence of Gabrieli (a composer whose music helped shape Grandi's writing style) is most noticeable in the Mass setting contained in this initial effort.
In 1617 Grandi accepted a position as singer at San Marco in Venice, and a year later was appointed voice teacher at a local seminary. But his most prestigious and financially rewarding post came when he was elevated to Monteverdi's assistant at San Marco in November, 1620.
Grandi held this position until 1627, when he secured an appointment at Santa Maria Maggiore, in Bergamo, as maestro di cappella, a post that required large-scale compositions, just the opposite kind of works popular in Venice around 1620, the year Grandi began to conform to tradition there by turning out his first solo cantatas and arias.
Grandi remained busy composing throughout the period 1610-30, producing mostly small-scale motets, except after his 1627 Bergamo appointment. Most of these motets appeared in five additional volumes, the last published in 1630. Through these works Grandi became instrumental in helping to establish the concertato style in church music that would soon become prevalent.
In 1629 Grandi published the first of three large volumes of church music—the result of his Bergamo appointment—his last important publications. He died in 1630, a victim of the bubonic plague.
© Robert Cummings, All Music Guide
Grandi may have been born in Ferrara or in the vicinity of Venice, but almost certainly not in Sicily as once claimed. Not much is known about his early years, but his activities began to emerge more clearly as the 17th century approached: between the late-1590s (1597-1600) and 1617 he held at least four positions of note.
The first (maestro di cappella) was at a religious fraternity in Ferrara, the Accademia della Morte, while the second, at San Marco Church in Venice, was as giovane di coro, beginning around 1605; the third (maestro di cappella), beginning in 1609-10, at the Accademia dello Spirito Santo, another religious fraternity in Ferrara; and the final one (maestro di cappella) was at the Ferrara Cathedral, from 1615 to 1617.
In the midst of this activity Grandi published his first volume of motets (1610). The influence of Gabrieli (a composer whose music helped shape Grandi's writing style) is most noticeable in the Mass setting contained in this initial effort.
In 1617 Grandi accepted a position as singer at San Marco in Venice, and a year later was appointed voice teacher at a local seminary. But his most prestigious and financially rewarding post came when he was elevated to Monteverdi's assistant at San Marco in November, 1620.
Grandi held this position until 1627, when he secured an appointment at Santa Maria Maggiore, in Bergamo, as maestro di cappella, a post that required large-scale compositions, just the opposite kind of works popular in Venice around 1620, the year Grandi began to conform to tradition there by turning out his first solo cantatas and arias.
Grandi remained busy composing throughout the period 1610-30, producing mostly small-scale motets, except after his 1627 Bergamo appointment. Most of these motets appeared in five additional volumes, the last published in 1630. Through these works Grandi became instrumental in helping to establish the concertato style in church music that would soon become prevalent.
In 1629 Grandi published the first of three large volumes of church music—the result of his Bergamo appointment—his last important publications. He died in 1630, a victim of the bubonic plague.
© Robert Cummings, All Music Guide
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Vocal Works
33 tracks
- Solo Vocal Works
5 tracks
- O quam tu pulchra es
2 tracks
- Salve Regina, motet for voice, 2 violins and continuo
1 track
- Tota pulchra es amica mea
1 track
- Virgo prudentissima
1 track
- O quam tu pulchra es
-
Choral Works
25 tracks
- Anima mea liquefacta est (a5)
1 track
- Ave Regina caelorum (a5)
1 track
- Deus Misereatur Nostri
2 tracks
- Exaudi Deus orationem meam (a5)
1 track
- Innova Domine signa (a5)
1 track
- Iste congnovit iustitiam (a5)
1 track
- Jesu, mi dulcissime
1 track
- Judica me Domine (a5)
1 track
- Lauda Sion Salvatorem
1 track
- Letaniae Beatae Mariae virginis (a5)
1 track
- O Bone Jesu (a5)
1 track
- O dulce nomen Jesus
1 track
- O dulcis et o pia (a5)
1 track
- O intemerata (a2)
1 track
- O quam tu pulchra es (a3)
2 tracks
- O sacrum convivium
1 track
- Plorabo die ac nocte (a4)
1 track
- Qui timetis Domine (a5)
1 track
- Quo rubicunda rosa (a5)
1 track
- Quomodo dilexi
1 track
- Sancte Sebastiane (a5)
1 track
- Versa est in luctum (a5)
1 track
- Missus est Gabriel
1 track
- Anima mea liquefacta est (a5)
- Egredimini filiae Sion, for voice & lute
1 track
- Cantabo Domino for 4 voices
1 track
- Hodie virgo Jesu dilecta, motet for voice and continuo
1 track
- Solo Vocal Works
Below are works by A.Grandi that every music lover should explore:



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