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Antonio Sacchini

Antonio Maria Gasparo Gioacchino Sacchini (14 June 1730 – 6 October 1786) was an Italian classical era composer, best known for his operas.

Antonio Sacchini

Sacchini was born in Florence, but raised in Naples, where he received his musical education. He made a name for himself as a composer of serious and comic opera in Italy before moving to London, where he produced works for the King's Theatre. He spent his final years in Paris, becoming embroiled in the musical dispute between the followers of the composers Gluck and Niccolò Piccinni. His early death in 1786 was blamed on his disappointment over the apparent failure of his opera Œdipe à Colone. However, when the work was revived the following year, it quickly became one of the most popular in the 18th-century French repertoire.

Life edit

Childhood and education edit

Sacchini was the son of a humble Florentine cook (or coachman),[1] Gaetano Sacchini. At the age of four, he moved with his family to Naples as part of the entourage of the infante Charles of Bourbon (later to become King Charles III of Spain). The young Sacchini's talent for music caught the attention of Francesco Durante, who enrolled him in the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto at the age of ten. Here Durante and his assistant Pietrantonio Gallo taught Sacchini the basics of composition, harmony and counterpoint. Sacchini also became a skilled violinist under the tuition of Nicola Fiorenza as well as studying singing under Gennaro Manna. Sacchini was one of the favourite pupils of Durante, a hard teacher to please. It was said that Durante would point out the young Sacchini to his fellow pupils, warning them that he would be a difficult rival to beat and urging them to try to match him, otherwise Sacchini would become the "man of the century."[2]

Early career in Italy edit

 
Tommaso Traetta, Sacchini's friend and fellow composer

Sacchini was 25 when Durante died in 1755. The following year, he became a "mastricello" (a junior teacher in the school) and had the opportunity to compose, as the final exercise of his studies, his first operatic work, an intermezzo in two parts entitled Fra' Donato. It was performed to great acclaim by the school's students and was followed a year later by another intermezzo, Il giocatore. The warm reception these works enjoyed paved Sacchini's way to commissions from the smaller theatres which performed opera in Neapolitan dialect. One of his major successes was the opera buffa Olimpia tradita (1758) at the Teatro dei Fiorentini, which led to commissions from the Teatro San Carlo, where his first opera seria, Andromaca, was premiered in 1761.[3] Meanwhile, Sacchini was pursuing his career at the Conservatorio, where he had initially taken up the unpaid position of "maestro di cappella straordinario", assisting the "primo maestro", Manna, and the "secondo maestro", Gallo. When Manna retired in 1761, shortly before the premiere of Andromaca, Sacchini was promoted to "secondo maestro".[2]

In 1762 the Conservatorio gave Sacchini permission to travel to Venice to present the operas Alessandro Severo (with a libretto by Apostolo Zeno) at the Teatro San Benedetto, and Alessandro nelle Indie (with a libretto by Metastasio) the following year at the Teatro San Salvatore. Over the next couple of years, Sacchini produced new operas for theatres across Italy: Olimpiade in Padua (Teatro Nuovo, 1763), Eumene in Florence (La Pergola, 1764), Semiramide riconosciuta in Rome (Teatro Argentina, 1764), and Lucio Vero in Naples (Teatro San Carlo, 1764). Success on an Italian-wide level encouraged Sacchini to leave his job at the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto,[4] as well as his temporary post in Venice, and to try his luck as an independent composer.[5]

Initially settling in Rome, Sacchini spent several years composing opere buffe for the Teatro Valle. These works made him famous throughout Europe. One of the most notable of them – it has been revived and recorded in modern times – was the two-act intermezzo La contadina in corte (1765). In 1768, Sacchini moved to Venice, having accepted the temporary post of director of the Conservatorio dell'Ospedale dei Poveri Derelitti (the "Ospedaletto"),[6] offered by his predecessor in the job Tommaso Traetta, who had been Sacchini's friend since their studies together in Naples and who was now leaving Venice to work at the court of Saint Petersburg.[7] In Venice, Sacchini soon made a name for himself as a singing master (his pupils included Nancy Storace and, possibly, Adriana Gabrielli, who, under the name Adriana Ferrarese del Bene was subsequently to go down in history as the first singer to play Mozart's Fiordiligi). While continuing to pursue his career as an opera composer, he also spent time writing sacred pieces (oratorios, masses, hymns, motets) for the Conservatorio and various Venetian churches, as his contract required.[2]

Charles Burney met Sacchini in Venice in 1770. By then, Sacchini was enjoying an enormous reputation: he had just scored successes with the operas Scipione in Cartagena and Calliroe in Munich and Ludwigsburg,[3] and he was, in the opinion of the English writer, the only composer worthy to stand alongside the "giant" Baldassare Galuppi among all the "dwarfs" who then populated the Venetian musical scene.[8]

 
Giuseppe Millico, the famous castrato singer who accompanied Sacchini to London

London edit

In 1772, Sacchini moved to London, accompanied by Giuseppe Millico, one of the finest castrati then active on the European stage and Gluck's favourite. Beginning with two new operas staged at the King's Theatre in 1773, Il Cid (in January) and Tamerlano (in May), in the words of Burney, Sacchini soon "captured the hearts" of the London public. He was so popular that Tommaso Traetta was unable to make any impression with his operas when he arrived in the British capital in 1776, even though Sacchini himself had supported the move by his old friend.[9] Sacchini remained in London for a decade, until 1782, despite the fact his enormous mounting debts created growing difficulties and even enemies. Among the latter was Venanzio Rauzzini, who had taken over from Millico as the leading male singer at the King's Theatre, and who claimed that he had written some of Sacchini's most famous arias himself.[2] The majority of Sacchini's chamber music dates from his years in London.[10] As far as music for the stage is concerned, new operas by Sacchini were produced every year over the whole period apart from 1776/1777,[11] probably in connection with the composer's trips to the Continent and with the staging in Paris of French-language pasticci based on two previous works: the dramma giocoso from the Roman period, L'isola d'amore, now entitled La colonie, and the opera seria L'Olimpiade, which became L'Olympiade.[12] The translator of the libretti into French was the musician and writer Nicolas-Étienne Framery, a lover of Italian music. At that time, the Parisian operatic scene was divided between supporters of the German composer Gluck, famous for his musical reforms, and followers of his Italian rival Niccolò Piccinni. A member of the emerging Piccinnist faction, Framery also admired Sacchini and formed a lasting friendship with him.[13] On 8 June 1779, a work by Sacchini appeared for the first time on the stage of the Paris Opéra. It was a revival of the dramma giocoso L'amore soldato, which had premiered in England the previous year, and was now advertised as an intermède in three acts.[14] During his stays in Paris in the seventies Sacchini is also said to have imparted the rudiments of a real singing education to the future European star of opera and refined cantatrice, Brigida Banti.[15]

Paris edit

 
Étienne Lainez as Rodrigue in Chimène, the second work Sacchini composed for the Paris Opéra

Sacchini's position in London eventually became untenable: his health had declined and his work was no longer attracting the same success. These factors and the looming threat of debtors' prison finally induced him to accept Framery's invitation to move to Paris in 1781. Sacchini received a warm welcome in the French capital: the Piccinnists saw him as a natural ally in their battle against the influence of Gluck; but, more importantly, Emperor Joseph II happened to be in Paris at the time, travelling incognito. The emperor was a passionate devotee of Italian music, and Sacchini's in particular, and he eagerly recommended the composer to his sister Marie Antoinette, the Queen of France. The Queen's patronage paved Sacchini's way to the Opéra (she had helped Gluck in much the same fashion eight years earlier). In October, Sacchini signed a lucrative contract with the Académie Royale de Musique (the Paris Opéra) to produce three new works.[2][10]

However, Sacchini immediately found himself embroiled in intrigues. Seigneur de la Ferté, the intendant of the Menus-Plaisirs du Roi, a sort of master of royal ceremonies who was also head of the Académie Royale, was opposed to the queen's predilection for foreign music.[16] He plotted to delay the premiere of Sacchini’s first French opera, Renaud. Meanwhile, the Gluckists were manoeuvring to detach Sacchini from his Piccinnist supporters. When Renaud finally appeared on 25 February 1783, its reception was positive but not overwhelming. The libretto was a reworking, to which Framery contributed, of a libretto by Simon-Joseph Pellegrin (Renaud, ou La suite d'Armide), which had originally been set to music in 1722 by Henri Desmarets. Contrary to what has often been claimed,[17] the Parisian Renaud was not a revised version of Sacchini's Armida of 1772, itself revised to create a new opera Rinaldo for London in 1780. Instead, Renaud was "a completely new opera, starting with the action, which begins at the point where the other two leave off; the subject of the opera was no longer the love of Armida and Rinaldo in the enchanted garden, which Armida destroys after her lover leaves her, but based on their subsequent story in Tasso's Gerusalemme liberata (with many liberties taken)."[18] However, Renaud pleased neither party: "Piccinni's faction asserted that the score ... was influenced by Gluck, while the Gluck supporters condemned the work for lacking dramatic power and originality."[2]

Sacchini's second opera for the Paris stage was also based on a subject the composer had treated (twice) before, the story of El Cid. The new work appeared at the court theatre under the title Chimène in November 1783, in an atmosphere of direct competition with Piccinni. Piccinni's Didon, staged at court the previous month, had been hailed as a masterpiece, enjoying a further two performances there; in comparison, Chimène made less of an impression and was only given once. However, "both composers were presented to the king (Sacchini by the queen herself) and given a large pension".[2] In fact, despite Sacchini's arrival in Paris having been supported by Piccinni himself (he had initially seen Sacchini as an ally), the continuing absence of Gluck (which would turn out to be permanent), the intrigues of Piccinni's enemies, Sacchini's touchiness and his need for money, had inevitably ended in a rivalry between the two Italian composers, and a third musical faction had emerged on the Parisian scene: the "Sacchinists", a "sort of moderate Gluckists, who, as [the writer on music] Grimm wittily observed, had adhered to the new sect solely because of their jealousy towards Piccinni. With his indecisiveness and weakness, Sacchini only succeeded in setting himself against both factions, without endearing himself to either; and when it came to a fight, he found both of them against him."[19]

 
A portrait of Marie Antoinette in 1783 by Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun

Sacchini's first two Parisian operas had been praised for their Italianate charm, but criticised for a certain dramatic weakness, also deriving from the Italian style. With his next operas, Sacchini "attempted to create works that conformed to the ideals of French musical drama."[2] Dardanus, with a libretto which was largely a reworking of Jean-Philippe Rameau's opera of the same name, provoked mixed reactions and appeared in two different versions in the first year of its life on stage. His next opera, Œdipe à Colone, was to have a far more dramatic impact on the life of the composer. Sacchini had finished the score in November 1785, and the enthusiastic Marie-Antoinette was keen for it to be given at court on 4 January 1786 to mark the opening of the new theatre at the Palace of Versailles (even though the finishing touches had not been made to the building). Perhaps because of difficulties with rehearsals, the one and only performance at court had limited success, but fate denied the composer the satisfaction of seeing it again, either at court, or at the Opéra. His pupil Henri Montan Berton, himself an opera composer, described the circumstances which delayed further performances:

Queen Marie Antoinette, who loved and cultivated the arts, had promised Sacchini that Oedipe would be the first opera to be performed at the court theatre after its transfer to Fontainebleau. Sacchini had shared the good news with us and continued his habit of meeting Her Majesty after she had heard mass, when she invited him to join her in her music salon. There she took pleasure in listening to some of the finest excerpts from Arvire et Évélina, the opera [with words by] Guillard on which he was then working. Having noticed that, for several Sundays in a row, the Queen seemed to avoid catching his eye, Sacchini – tormented with anxiety – deliberately placed himself in her way so that Her Majesty had no choice but to speak with him. She received him in the music salon and told him, in a voice full of emotion: 'My dear Sacchini, people say I show too much favour to foreigners. They have pressured me so strongly to have Monsieur Lemoyne's Phèdre[20] performed instead of your Œdipe that I could not refuse. You see the position I am in, please forgive me.'

Sacchini, struggling to contain his distress, bowed respectfully and immediately returned to Paris. He was brought to my mother's house. He entered in tears and threw himself into an armchair. We could only get a few broken phrases from him: 'My good friend, my children, I'm finished. The Queen, she no longer loves me! The Queen, she no longer loves me!' All our efforts to allay his grief were in vain. He refused to have dinner with us. He was very ill with gout...we took him back to his house and three [days] later he died at the age of 56.[21]

Sacchini died on 6 October 1786, aged 56, leaving the score of Arvire et Évélina incomplete. It was finished by Jean-Baptiste Rey, the head of the Opéra, and successfully produced on 29 April 1788.

Sacchini's dramatic death caught the public's imagination. The involvement of the queen and a sincerely appreciative article by Piccinni, who dedicated a moving funeral oration to the dead composer, turned popular opinion in his favour. The management of the Académie Royale, without even waiting for the usual pressure from above, ordered Œdipe à Colone to go into rehearsal at the Théâtre de la Porte Saint-Martin, then the temporary home of the Opéra. "The first performance of Œdipe à Colone took place on Tuesday 1 February 1787 ... The hall was packed, and many people had to remain standing ... The turnout made the triumph even more impressive."[22] Its success was resounding and lasting: henceforward, the work was staged in Paris's leading theatre every year from 1787 to 1830, and revived in July 1843 and May 1844, giving a total of 583 performances,[23] making it Sacchini's most famous opera and one of the most durable of the eighteenth-century repertoire, surpassing even the operas of Gluck, at least until it fell into the oblivion in which it has more or less remained until today, along with the rest of Sacchini's work.

Musical style edit

"The real significance of Sacchini's work is difficult to determine aesthetically, although the obvious historical importance of the composer and his activity undoubtedly demands more careful study and more thorough investigation":[3] with these words the editor of Sacchini's article in the Grande Enciclopedia della Musica Lirica begins the section evaluating his music. Any such assessment is made more difficult by the comparative lack of interest the modern operatic world has shown in Sacchini's works, although this has begun to change in the early 21st century: there are now two complete recordings of Œdipe à Colone and one of Renaud.[24]

In his own time, Sacchini was described as the champion of melody. Indeed, the composer Giuseppe Carpani, about twenty years his junior, said that Sacchini might even be considered the finest melodist in the world.[25] This melodic gift, along with the general facility Sacchini found in composing music, was undoubtedly the result of his upbringing amid the flourishing Neapolitan school of opera.[3] From the beginning, however, Sacchini revealed a tendency to distance himself from the more hackneyed features of the Italian operatic tradition. "Only rarely did he adhere to the complete da capo form, but he often made use of altered versions of this basic plan. He also made frequent use of a cavatina-like two-part aria that approximates to the A portion of the da capo form, and of the vocal rondò, in both comic and serious works."[25] However, it was only when he became part of "an international musical milieu and with the acquisition of a much broader and more diverse experience that Sacchini's finest qualities achieved complete maturity."[3] This is true above all of the period in Paris, when he "strengthened his own style with an obviously Gluckian influence, which was not, however, strong enough to cancel out his melodic and sensuous gifts", which derived from the Italian tradition, "while his orchestral palette was also enriched by new and vivid colours, which frequently anticipated many aspects of the future Romantic movement."[3] The most characteristic work in this respect is undoubtedly Œdipe à Colone, but the description also applies to Dardanus: "these are operas in which every element lacking a dramatic function has been removed. Accompanied recitatives, ariosos and arias blend naturally into one another...[giving life] to scenes whose unity is guaranteed by the use of the same thematic material...the combination of cavatina and cabaletta is particularly successful, and it was destined to become a common feature of opera in the following century...[finally] the choral scenes, alternating chorus and soloists, are highly effective, on the one hand revealing the influence of Gluck, and on the other showing the way forward to the grand opera of Spontini."[26] Writing in Grove, David DiChiera concludes, "With his masterpiece, Œdipe, Sacchini admirably achieved a synthesis of Italian melodic style and Gluckian principles within a French dramatic framework".[25]

Works edit

Unless otherwise stated in the footnotes, the following list of Sacchini's works is drawn from the "biographical summary" by Georges Sauvé (Sauvé 2006).[27] The list of works is still incomplete, mainly as far as non-operatic music is concerned.

Operas edit

Title Genre Acts Premiere (place) Premiere (date) Revisions and notable revivals
Fra Donato intermezzo 2 acts Naples 1756
Il giocatore intermezzo Naples 1757
Olimpia tradita[28] commedia Naples 1758
Il copista burlato commedia Naples 1759
La vendemmia intermezzo 1 act Rome 1760 Revised for Barcelona in 1767
Il testaccio opera buffa Rome 1760
I due fratelli beffati commedia Naples 1760
Andromaca opera seria Naples 30 May 1761
La finta contessa farsetta Rome 1761
Li due bari opera buffa Naples 1762
L'amore in campo dramma giocoso 2 acts Rome 1762
Alessandro Severo opera seria 3 acts Venice Carnival 1763
Alessandro nell'Indie opera seria Venice 1763
Olimpiade opera seria 3 acts Padua 1763 Revived in Paris in 1777 as a pasticcio with music by Sacchini, under the title L'olympiade, to a translation by N.E. Framery
Semiramide riconosciuta opera seria 3 acts Rome 1764
Eumene opera seria Florence 1764
Lucio Vero opera seria Naples 4 November 1764 Partly revived in London in 1773 as a pasticcio
Il finto pazzo per amore intermezzo 2 acts Rome 1765 Multiple revivals
Creso opera seria 3 acts Naples 1765 Revised for London in 1774 and, under the new title of Euriso, in 1781
La contadina in corte opera buffa Rome 1765 Multiple revivals (London, 1782)
L'isola d'amore dramma giocoso 2 acts Rome 1766 Revived in Paris in 1775, to a translation by N.E. Framery entitled La colonie, as a pasticcio with music by Sacchini, in the form of an opéra-comique.
The original Italian version was also revised for London in 1776 while the French one was furtherly reworked in German in 1779
Le contadine bizzarre[29] Milan 1766
Artaserse opera seria 3 acts Rome 1768
Il Cidde opera seria 3 acts Roma 1769[30]
Nicoraste opera seria 3 acts Venice 1769
Scipione in Cartagena opera seria Munich 8 January 1770
Calliroe opera seria Ludwigsburg 1770
L'eroe cinese opera seria Munich 1770
Adriano in Siria opera seria Venice 1770
Ezio opera seria Naples 1771
Armida opera seria 3 acts Milan and Florence 1772 Revised for London in 1780 as Rinaldo
Vologeso opera seria Parma 1772
Il Cid opera seria London 19 January 1773
Tamerlano opera seria London 1773
Perseo opera seria 3 acts London 1774
Nitteti opera seria 3 acts London 1774
Montezuma opera seria 3 acts London 1775
Didone abbandonata[31] opera seria London 1775
Erifile opera seria 3 acts London 1778
L'amore soldato dramma giocoso 3 acts London 1778 Revived in Paris in 1779 (Sacchini's debut at the Paris Opéra)
L'avaro deluso, o Don Calandrino dramma giocoso 3 acts London 1778
Enea e Lavinia opera seria 3 acts London 1779
Mitridate opera seria London 1781
Rosina[32] London 1783
Renaud[33] opéra
(tragédie lyrique)
3 acts Paris 1783
Chimène tragédie lyrique 3 acts Fontainebleau 1783
Dardanus[34] tragédie 4 acts Paris 1784
Œdipe à Colone[35] tragédie lyrique 3 acts Versailles 4 January 1786
Arvire et Évélina
(unfinished, completed by Jean-Baptiste Rey)
tragédie lyrique 3 acts Paris 1788

Operas written in collaboration with other musicians edit

In this section are listed the operas containing original music by Sacchini and by other composers.

Instrumental music edit

Nearly all instrumental music published by Antonio Sacchini dates from his London years (1772–1781). Most of the works listed below, first published in London, were later reprinted in Paris and elsewhere.

Sacred music edit

Sacchini's sacred works were composed for the most part during his directorship at the conservatoire of the Ospedaletto in Venice. Significantly, all Venice compositions are in major tonality.[42]

  • 1761 Gesù presentato al tempio, oratorio, Naples
  • 1764 L'umiltà esaltata, oratorio, Naples
  • 1766 L'abbandono delle richezze di San Filippo Neri, oratorio, Bologna[43]
  • 1768 II popolo di Giuda liberato della morte per intercessione della regina Esther, oratorio, Venice
  • 1768 Magnificat in D major, Venice
  • 1768 Salve Regina in G major, antiphon, Venice
  • 1768 Fremo gemendo in poena in B major, psalm, Venice
  • 1768 Sicut lilia in valle amoena in F major, psalm, Venice
  • 1769 Mass in D major (Kyrie, gloria), Venice
  • 1769 Te Deum in D major, Venice
  • 1769 Habet amor suas procellas in D major, Venice
  • 1769 Aurae de caelo in B major, Venice
  • 1769 Charitas omnia vincit (modi sacri), motet, Venice
  • 1769 Paventi ut nautae in G major, psalm, Venice
  • 1770 Salve Regina in F major, hymn (antiphon), Venice
  • 1770 Machabaeorum mater, azione sacra (actio sacra), Venice
  • 1771 Ave Regina caelorum in F major, hymn (antiphon), Venice
  • 1771 O quam carae et quam beatae silvae, psalm, Venice
  • 1771 Jephtes sacrificium azione sacra (actio sacra), Venice
  • 1772 Miserere in E  major, psalm, Venice
  • 1772 Regina caeli in D major, antiphon, Venice
  • 1772 Missa solemnis in D major (Kyrie, gloria, credo), Venice
  • 1772 Cor serba te fidelem in F major, psalm, Venice
  • 1772 Nuptiae Ruth, azione sacra (actio sacra), Venice
  • 1786 Juditta, oratorio, Paris

Undated, but traceable back to the Venetian period (1768–1772)

  • Ave Regina caelorum in E  major, hymn (antiphon), Venice
  • Regina caeli in B major, antiphon, Venice

Salon vocal music edit

Georges Sauvé reports that there exist "numerous works not yet catalogued, in Italy, in London (including nine 1775 duets), in Paris, in Dublin, ariettas which were published long after his death, arias, cantatas ..." There also exists Fanny Bazin's Music Book,[44] a completely unpublished handwritten collection by Antonio Sacchini, dating back to 1785 and currently belonging to Sauvé himself, a descendant of Madame Bazin. It contains 19 melodies (16 for piano and soprano, 1 for piano solo, 1 duet for two sopranos and a quartet), and is due to be published by ELPE-Musique (Le Cahier de musique de Fanny Bazin). The book was used in the lessons Sacchini gave to the 11-year-old Bazin at the behest of Queen Marie Antoinette[45] and "is witness to the refinement and intensity of the artistic life that Queen Marie Antoinette shared with those close to her".[46]

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Sauvé 2006, p. 15.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h DiChiera 1997, p. 114
  3. ^ a b c d e f Caruselli, vol. IV, p. 1087
  4. ^ Sauvé 2006, pp. 26–27.
  5. ^ Dorsi & Rausa 2000, p. 167.
  6. ^ Sauvé 2006, p. 30.
  7. ^ See Giuseppe Ellero, Maria Carla Paolucci, Jolanda Scarpa (ed.), Arte e musica all'Ospedaletto. Schede d'archivio sull'attività musicale degli Ospedali dei Derelitti e dei Mendicanti di Venezia (sec. XVI–XVIII), Venice, Stamperia di Venezia Editrice, 1978
  8. ^ The Present State of Music in France and Italy: or, The Journal of a Tour through those Countries, undertaken to collect Materials for a General History of Music. By Charles Burney, Mus. D., second edition, London, Becket, Roeson and Robinson, 1773, pp. 184–185
  9. ^ Jörg Riedlbauer, Tommaso Traetta. Opere (Bari, Palomar, 2008) ISBN 9788876002519
  10. ^ a b Sauvé 2006
  11. ^ In 1780, there appeared Rinaldo, a reworking of a previous opera, Armida (see below with reference to Renaud).
  12. ^ The staging of this opera seria at the Comédie Italienne was highly unusual and in fact a violation of the long-standing legal agreement which reserved the performance of tragic operas for the Académie Royale de Musique et de Danse
  13. ^ Jullien 1878, pp. 15 et seq..
  14. ^ Pitou 1985, pp. 482–483; Lajarte 1878, p. 311
  15. ^ Bruce Carr, Banti, Brigida Giorgi, in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, cit., I, p. 304.
  16. ^ It was less than ten years since Gluck had succeeded in breaking the century-old monopoly French (or naturalised French) had exercised over the repertoire of the Opéra.
  17. ^ cf. DiChiera 1997, p. 114, Caruselli, p. 1087, Dorsi & Rausa 2000, p. 167
  18. ^ Dizionario dell'opera (article on: Renaud)
  19. ^ Jullien 1878, p. 61.
  20. ^ Phèdre was in fact performed at court on 26 October.
  21. ^ Revue et gazette musicale de Paris, 1833, number 12. Quoted in Florimo 1869, pp. 426–427. The quotation by Florimo, as well as the one by Jullien 1878, pp. 103–104, refers to a period of "three months" between Marie Antoinette's announcement and Sacchini's death. Since such a lapse of time is obviously incongruous with the other available facts, Sauvé took the trouble to check Berton's original report in the library of the Opéra and discovered that he had actually written "three days". The date is also confirmed by a letter reproduced as a photograph by Sauvé 2006, pp. 113–115: this was written 69 years after the events by Françoise "Fanny" Bazin, at the time a young reader to the queen (she was the daughter of Charles Bazin, the intendant of the queen's Menus Plaisirs) and she too gives direct and clear evidence about what happened.
  22. ^ Sauvé 2006, pp. 121–122.
  23. ^ Lajarte 1878, p. 355.
  24. ^ Œdipe à Colone: Chœur de Chambre et Orchestre de la Camerata de Bourgogne, conducted by Jean-Paul Penin (Dynamic, 2005); Opera Lafayette Orchestra and Chorus, conducted by Ryan Brown (Naxos, 2006); Renaud, Les Talens Lyriques, conducted by Christophe Rousset (Ediciones Speciales, 2013).
  25. ^ a b c DiChiera 1997, p. 115
  26. ^ Dorsi & Rausa 2000, p. 168.
  27. ^ The sources from which Sauvé states he has drawn his information (p. 143), are as follows: DiChiera 1997; Thierstein, i.e. a dissertation produced at the University of Cincinnati in 1974 and apparently never published (Eldred A. Thierstein, Antonio Maria Gaspero Sacchini and his French operas); Hochstein, i.e. Wolfgang Hochstein [de], "Musikforschung am Ospedaletto zu Venedig zur Zeit Antonio Sacchinis", Die Musikforschung, 1987, 40, 320–337; Roberto Zanetti, i.e. probably, La musica italiana nel Settecento, Busto Arsizio, Bramante Editrice, 1978
  28. ^ Sauvé 2006's list reports the erroneous title of L'Armida tradita.
  29. ^ Cited by Opera Glass.
  30. ^ Sauvé 2006 erroneously antedates in 1764 the production of the opera under the title of Il Gran Cidde (as stated by Dennis Libby, Cidde, Il, in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, cit., I, p. 862).
  31. ^ Cited by Sauvé 2006 and by Opera Glass. The New Grove Dictionary of Opera reports this work, along with 1770 Le vicende della sorte, as just containing music by Sacchini ("Music in:").
  32. ^ Reported by Sauvé 2006, but not cited by DiChiera 1997.
  33. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2006-05-27.
  34. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-11. Retrieved 2006-05-27.
  35. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-17. Retrieved 2006-05-27.
  36. ^ Stated by DiChiera 1997 too.
  37. ^ No mention of the collaboration is made by Siegfried Gmeinwieser/R in his article Fenaroli, Fedele, in Grove Dictionary, II, p. 152.
  38. ^ No mention of the collaboration is made by Dale E. Monson in his article Galuppi, Baldassare, in Grove Dictionary, II, p. 340. Monson just cites, among the original operas by Galluppi, a 1762 work bearing the similar title of Il marchese villano.
  39. ^ Reported as a pasticcio by Irena Cholij in her article Giordani, Tommaso, in Grove Dictionary, II, p. 426, and as containing music by Sacchini ("Music in:") by DiChiera 1997 (cf. footnote above).
  40. ^ According to Sauvé 2006, this piece of information is taken from Grove, i.e. probably, in this case, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
  41. ^ The Periodical Overture was an editorial initiative by Robert Bremner, consisting in publishing 'periodically' new overtures by different composers. In the programme were involved, over a period of twenty years (1763–1783), such musicians as Thomas Arne, Karl Friedrich Abel, Johann Christian Bach, Luigi Boccherini, Christian Cannabich, Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf, Christoph Willibald Gluck, François-Joseph Gossec, Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi, Joseph and Michael Haydn, Ignaz Holzbauer, Niccolò Jommelli, Niccolò Piccinni, Gaetano Pugnani, Franz Xaver Richter, Johann Schobert, Johann Stamitz, Johann Baptist Vanhal. Cf David Wyn Jones, "Robert Bremner and The Periodical Overture", Soundings (University College Cardiff Press), VII (1978), p. 63–84.
  42. ^ The composition titles containing forms of the Latin word caelum ('heaven') are reported by Sauvé 2006 in such correct classical spelling and it is also the form used today in official liturgical books.
  43. ^ In his list of Sacchini's sacred works, Sauvé 2006 identifies Rome as the first performance place (p. 146), whereas he had previously stated Bologna (p. 30). In fact, in Bologna, at the local Congregation of the Oratory, is preserved the manuscript of the work, which, incidentally, was performed in 2007, during the event Creator – Faenza Musica Sacra (, amadeusonline.net (archived)
  44. ^ The dedicatee of the book is Françoise (Fanny) Bazin, already mentioned above in a footnote, an ancestor of Sauvé, and the former holder by inheritance of Sacchini's own copy of the original edition of Œdipe à Colone, which was utilized by ELPE-Musique 2013-09-21 at the Wayback Machine for the modern edition of the opera.
  45. ^ Cf. the review of Sauvé's "bréviaire biographique" by Emmanuelle Pesqué, in ODB Opéra Passion (2007)
  46. ^ Le Cahier de musique de Fanny Bazin

Sources edit

Bibliography edit

  • Caruselli, Salvatore (ed.). Grande enciclopedia della musica lirica (in Italian). Rome: Longanesi & C. Periodici.
  • DiChiera, David (1997). "Sacchini, Antonio (Maria Gasparo Gioacchino)". In Stanley Sadie (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Vol. IV. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 114–116. ISBN 978-0-19-522186-2.
  • Dorsi, Frabrizio; Rausa, Giuseppe (2000). Storia dell'opera italiana (in Italian). Turin: B. Mondadori. ISBN 978-88-424-9408-9.
  • Florimo, Francesco (1869). Cenno storico sulla scuola musicale di Napoli. Del Cavalier Francesco Florimo, archivista del Real Collegio di musica in S. Pietro a Majella (in Italian). Naples: Lorenzo Rocco.
  • Jullien, Adolphe (1878). La Cour et l'Opéra sous Louis XVI. Marie-Antoinette et Sacchini Salieri Favart et Gluck. D'après des documents inédits conservés aux Archives de l'État et à l'Opéra (in French). Paris: Librairie Académique (Didier). OL 14017446M.
  • Lajarte, Théodore de (1878). Bibliothèque Musicale du Théatre de l'Opéra. Catalogue Historique, Chronologique, Anecdotique (in French). Vol. I. Paris: Librairie des bibliophiles.
  • Pitou, Spire (1985). The Paris Opéra. An Encyclopedia of Operas, Ballets, Composers, and Performers – Rococo and Romantic, 1715–1815. Westport/London: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-24394-8.
  • Sauvé, Georges (2006). Antonio Sacchini 1730–1786 – Un musicien de Marie-Antoinette – Bréviaire biographique (in French). Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 2-296-01994-3.

Online sources edit

  • (in Italian) Dizionario dell'opera (article on Renaud)
  • (in French)
  • This article contains material translated from the equivalent article in the Italian Wikipedia

External links edit

antonio, sacchini, antonio, maria, gasparo, gioacchino, sacchini, june, 1730, october, 1786, italian, classical, composer, best, known, operas, sacchini, born, florence, raised, naples, where, received, musical, education, made, name, himself, composer, seriou. Antonio Maria Gasparo Gioacchino Sacchini 14 June 1730 6 October 1786 was an Italian classical era composer best known for his operas Antonio SacchiniSacchini was born in Florence but raised in Naples where he received his musical education He made a name for himself as a composer of serious and comic opera in Italy before moving to London where he produced works for the King s Theatre He spent his final years in Paris becoming embroiled in the musical dispute between the followers of the composers Gluck and Niccolo Piccinni His early death in 1786 was blamed on his disappointment over the apparent failure of his opera Œdipe a Colone However when the work was revived the following year it quickly became one of the most popular in the 18th century French repertoire Contents 1 Life 1 1 Childhood and education 1 2 Early career in Italy 1 3 London 1 4 Paris 2 Musical style 3 Works 3 1 Operas 3 1 1 Operas written in collaboration with other musicians 3 2 Instrumental music 3 3 Sacred music 3 4 Salon vocal music 4 Notes and references 5 Sources 5 1 Bibliography 5 2 Online sources 6 External linksLife editChildhood and education edit Sacchini was the son of a humble Florentine cook or coachman 1 Gaetano Sacchini At the age of four he moved with his family to Naples as part of the entourage of the infante Charles of Bourbon later to become King Charles III of Spain The young Sacchini s talent for music caught the attention of Francesco Durante who enrolled him in the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto at the age of ten Here Durante and his assistant Pietrantonio Gallo taught Sacchini the basics of composition harmony and counterpoint Sacchini also became a skilled violinist under the tuition of Nicola Fiorenza as well as studying singing under Gennaro Manna Sacchini was one of the favourite pupils of Durante a hard teacher to please It was said that Durante would point out the young Sacchini to his fellow pupils warning them that he would be a difficult rival to beat and urging them to try to match him otherwise Sacchini would become the man of the century 2 Early career in Italy edit nbsp Tommaso Traetta Sacchini s friend and fellow composerSacchini was 25 when Durante died in 1755 The following year he became a mastricello a junior teacher in the school and had the opportunity to compose as the final exercise of his studies his first operatic work an intermezzo in two parts entitled Fra Donato It was performed to great acclaim by the school s students and was followed a year later by another intermezzo Il giocatore The warm reception these works enjoyed paved Sacchini s way to commissions from the smaller theatres which performed opera in Neapolitan dialect One of his major successes was the opera buffa Olimpia tradita 1758 at the Teatro dei Fiorentini which led to commissions from the Teatro San Carlo where his first opera seria Andromaca was premiered in 1761 3 Meanwhile Sacchini was pursuing his career at the Conservatorio where he had initially taken up the unpaid position of maestro di cappella straordinario assisting the primo maestro Manna and the secondo maestro Gallo When Manna retired in 1761 shortly before the premiere of Andromaca Sacchini was promoted to secondo maestro 2 In 1762 the Conservatorio gave Sacchini permission to travel to Venice to present the operas Alessandro Severo with a libretto by Apostolo Zeno at the Teatro San Benedetto and Alessandro nelle Indie with a libretto by Metastasio the following year at the Teatro San Salvatore Over the next couple of years Sacchini produced new operas for theatres across Italy Olimpiade in Padua Teatro Nuovo 1763 Eumene in Florence La Pergola 1764 Semiramide riconosciuta in Rome Teatro Argentina 1764 and Lucio Vero in Naples Teatro San Carlo 1764 Success on an Italian wide level encouraged Sacchini to leave his job at the Conservatorio di Santa Maria di Loreto 4 as well as his temporary post in Venice and to try his luck as an independent composer 5 Initially settling in Rome Sacchini spent several years composing opere buffe for the Teatro Valle These works made him famous throughout Europe One of the most notable of them it has been revived and recorded in modern times was the two act intermezzo La contadina in corte 1765 In 1768 Sacchini moved to Venice having accepted the temporary post of director of the Conservatorio dell Ospedale dei Poveri Derelitti the Ospedaletto 6 offered by his predecessor in the job Tommaso Traetta who had been Sacchini s friend since their studies together in Naples and who was now leaving Venice to work at the court of Saint Petersburg 7 In Venice Sacchini soon made a name for himself as a singing master his pupils included Nancy Storace and possibly Adriana Gabrielli who under the name Adriana Ferrarese del Bene was subsequently to go down in history as the first singer to play Mozart s Fiordiligi While continuing to pursue his career as an opera composer he also spent time writing sacred pieces oratorios masses hymns motets for the Conservatorio and various Venetian churches as his contract required 2 Charles Burney met Sacchini in Venice in 1770 By then Sacchini was enjoying an enormous reputation he had just scored successes with the operas Scipione in Cartagena and Calliroe in Munich and Ludwigsburg 3 and he was in the opinion of the English writer the only composer worthy to stand alongside the giant Baldassare Galuppi among all the dwarfs who then populated the Venetian musical scene 8 nbsp Giuseppe Millico the famous castrato singer who accompanied Sacchini to LondonLondon edit In 1772 Sacchini moved to London accompanied by Giuseppe Millico one of the finest castrati then active on the European stage and Gluck s favourite Beginning with two new operas staged at the King s Theatre in 1773 Il Cid in January and Tamerlano in May in the words of Burney Sacchini soon captured the hearts of the London public He was so popular that Tommaso Traetta was unable to make any impression with his operas when he arrived in the British capital in 1776 even though Sacchini himself had supported the move by his old friend 9 Sacchini remained in London for a decade until 1782 despite the fact his enormous mounting debts created growing difficulties and even enemies Among the latter was Venanzio Rauzzini who had taken over from Millico as the leading male singer at the King s Theatre and who claimed that he had written some of Sacchini s most famous arias himself 2 The majority of Sacchini s chamber music dates from his years in London 10 As far as music for the stage is concerned new operas by Sacchini were produced every year over the whole period apart from 1776 1777 11 probably in connection with the composer s trips to the Continent and with the staging in Paris of French language pasticci based on two previous works the dramma giocoso from the Roman period L isola d amore now entitled La colonie and the opera seria L Olimpiade which became L Olympiade 12 The translator of the libretti into French was the musician and writer Nicolas Etienne Framery a lover of Italian music At that time the Parisian operatic scene was divided between supporters of the German composer Gluck famous for his musical reforms and followers of his Italian rival Niccolo Piccinni A member of the emerging Piccinnist faction Framery also admired Sacchini and formed a lasting friendship with him 13 On 8 June 1779 a work by Sacchini appeared for the first time on the stage of the Paris Opera It was a revival of the dramma giocoso L amore soldato which had premiered in England the previous year and was now advertised as an intermede in three acts 14 During his stays in Paris in the seventies Sacchini is also said to have imparted the rudiments of a real singing education to the future European star of opera and refined cantatrice Brigida Banti 15 Paris edit nbsp Etienne Lainez as Rodrigue in Chimene the second work Sacchini composed for the Paris OperaSacchini s position in London eventually became untenable his health had declined and his work was no longer attracting the same success These factors and the looming threat of debtors prison finally induced him to accept Framery s invitation to move to Paris in 1781 Sacchini received a warm welcome in the French capital the Piccinnists saw him as a natural ally in their battle against the influence of Gluck but more importantly Emperor Joseph II happened to be in Paris at the time travelling incognito The emperor was a passionate devotee of Italian music and Sacchini s in particular and he eagerly recommended the composer to his sister Marie Antoinette the Queen of France The Queen s patronage paved Sacchini s way to the Opera she had helped Gluck in much the same fashion eight years earlier In October Sacchini signed a lucrative contract with the Academie Royale de Musique the Paris Opera to produce three new works 2 10 However Sacchini immediately found himself embroiled in intrigues Seigneur de la Ferte the intendant of the Menus Plaisirs du Roi a sort of master of royal ceremonies who was also head of the Academie Royale was opposed to the queen s predilection for foreign music 16 He plotted to delay the premiere of Sacchini s first French opera Renaud Meanwhile the Gluckists were manoeuvring to detach Sacchini from his Piccinnist supporters When Renaud finally appeared on 25 February 1783 its reception was positive but not overwhelming The libretto was a reworking to which Framery contributed of a libretto by Simon Joseph Pellegrin Renaud ou La suite d Armide which had originally been set to music in 1722 by Henri Desmarets Contrary to what has often been claimed 17 the Parisian Renaud was not a revised version of Sacchini s Armida of 1772 itself revised to create a new opera Rinaldo for London in 1780 Instead Renaud was a completely new opera starting with the action which begins at the point where the other two leave off the subject of the opera was no longer the love of Armida and Rinaldo in the enchanted garden which Armida destroys after her lover leaves her but based on their subsequent story in Tasso s Gerusalemme liberata with many liberties taken 18 However Renaud pleased neither party Piccinni s faction asserted that the score was influenced by Gluck while the Gluck supporters condemned the work for lacking dramatic power and originality 2 Sacchini s second opera for the Paris stage was also based on a subject the composer had treated twice before the story of El Cid The new work appeared at the court theatre under the title Chimene in November 1783 in an atmosphere of direct competition with Piccinni Piccinni s Didon staged at court the previous month had been hailed as a masterpiece enjoying a further two performances there in comparison Chimene made less of an impression and was only given once However both composers were presented to the king Sacchini by the queen herself and given a large pension 2 In fact despite Sacchini s arrival in Paris having been supported by Piccinni himself he had initially seen Sacchini as an ally the continuing absence of Gluck which would turn out to be permanent the intrigues of Piccinni s enemies Sacchini s touchiness and his need for money had inevitably ended in a rivalry between the two Italian composers and a third musical faction had emerged on the Parisian scene the Sacchinists a sort of moderate Gluckists who as the writer on music Grimm wittily observed had adhered to the new sect solely because of their jealousy towards Piccinni With his indecisiveness and weakness Sacchini only succeeded in setting himself against both factions without endearing himself to either and when it came to a fight he found both of them against him 19 nbsp A portrait of Marie Antoinette in 1783 by Elisabeth Vigee LebrunSacchini s first two Parisian operas had been praised for their Italianate charm but criticised for a certain dramatic weakness also deriving from the Italian style With his next operas Sacchini attempted to create works that conformed to the ideals of French musical drama 2 Dardanus with a libretto which was largely a reworking of Jean Philippe Rameau s opera of the same name provoked mixed reactions and appeared in two different versions in the first year of its life on stage His next opera Œdipe a Colone was to have a far more dramatic impact on the life of the composer Sacchini had finished the score in November 1785 and the enthusiastic Marie Antoinette was keen for it to be given at court on 4 January 1786 to mark the opening of the new theatre at the Palace of Versailles even though the finishing touches had not been made to the building Perhaps because of difficulties with rehearsals the one and only performance at court had limited success but fate denied the composer the satisfaction of seeing it again either at court or at the Opera His pupil Henri Montan Berton himself an opera composer described the circumstances which delayed further performances Queen Marie Antoinette who loved and cultivated the arts had promised Sacchini that Oedipe would be the first opera to be performed at the court theatre after its transfer to Fontainebleau Sacchini had shared the good news with us and continued his habit of meeting Her Majesty after she had heard mass when she invited him to join her in her music salon There she took pleasure in listening to some of the finest excerpts from Arvire et Evelina the opera with words by Guillard on which he was then working Having noticed that for several Sundays in a row the Queen seemed to avoid catching his eye Sacchini tormented with anxiety deliberately placed himself in her way so that Her Majesty had no choice but to speak with him She received him in the music salon and told him in a voice full of emotion My dear Sacchini people say I show too much favour to foreigners They have pressured me so strongly to have Monsieur Lemoyne s Phedre 20 performed instead of your Œdipe that I could not refuse You see the position I am in please forgive me Sacchini struggling to contain his distress bowed respectfully and immediately returned to Paris He was brought to my mother s house He entered in tears and threw himself into an armchair We could only get a few broken phrases from him My good friend my children I m finished The Queen she no longer loves me The Queen she no longer loves me All our efforts to allay his grief were in vain He refused to have dinner with us He was very ill with gout we took him back to his house and three days later he died at the age of 56 21 Sacchini died on 6 October 1786 aged 56 leaving the score of Arvire et Evelina incomplete It was finished by Jean Baptiste Rey the head of the Opera and successfully produced on 29 April 1788 Sacchini s dramatic death caught the public s imagination The involvement of the queen and a sincerely appreciative article by Piccinni who dedicated a moving funeral oration to the dead composer turned popular opinion in his favour The management of the Academie Royale without even waiting for the usual pressure from above ordered Œdipe a Colone to go into rehearsal at the Theatre de la Porte Saint Martin then the temporary home of the Opera The first performance of Œdipe a Colone took place on Tuesday 1 February 1787 The hall was packed and many people had to remain standing The turnout made the triumph even more impressive 22 Its success was resounding and lasting henceforward the work was staged in Paris s leading theatre every year from 1787 to 1830 and revived in July 1843 and May 1844 giving a total of 583 performances 23 making it Sacchini s most famous opera and one of the most durable of the eighteenth century repertoire surpassing even the operas of Gluck at least until it fell into the oblivion in which it has more or less remained until today along with the rest of Sacchini s work Musical style edit The real significance of Sacchini s work is difficult to determine aesthetically although the obvious historical importance of the composer and his activity undoubtedly demands more careful study and more thorough investigation 3 with these words the editor of Sacchini s article in the Grande Enciclopedia della Musica Lirica begins the section evaluating his music Any such assessment is made more difficult by the comparative lack of interest the modern operatic world has shown in Sacchini s works although this has begun to change in the early 21st century there are now two complete recordings of Œdipe a Colone and one of Renaud 24 In his own time Sacchini was described as the champion of melody Indeed the composer Giuseppe Carpani about twenty years his junior said that Sacchini might even be considered the finest melodist in the world 25 This melodic gift along with the general facility Sacchini found in composing music was undoubtedly the result of his upbringing amid the flourishing Neapolitan school of opera 3 From the beginning however Sacchini revealed a tendency to distance himself from the more hackneyed features of the Italian operatic tradition Only rarely did he adhere to the complete da capo form but he often made use of altered versions of this basic plan He also made frequent use of a cavatina like two part aria that approximates to the A portion of the da capo form and of the vocal rondo in both comic and serious works 25 However it was only when he became part of an international musical milieu and with the acquisition of a much broader and more diverse experience that Sacchini s finest qualities achieved complete maturity 3 This is true above all of the period in Paris when he strengthened his own style with an obviously Gluckian influence which was not however strong enough to cancel out his melodic and sensuous gifts which derived from the Italian tradition while his orchestral palette was also enriched by new and vivid colours which frequently anticipated many aspects of the future Romantic movement 3 The most characteristic work in this respect is undoubtedly Œdipe a Colone but the description also applies to Dardanus these are operas in which every element lacking a dramatic function has been removed Accompanied recitatives ariosos and arias blend naturally into one another giving life to scenes whose unity is guaranteed by the use of the same thematic material the combination of cavatina and cabaletta is particularly successful and it was destined to become a common feature of opera in the following century finally the choral scenes alternating chorus and soloists are highly effective on the one hand revealing the influence of Gluck and on the other showing the way forward to the grand opera of Spontini 26 Writing in Grove David DiChiera concludes With his masterpiece Œdipe Sacchini admirably achieved a synthesis of Italian melodic style and Gluckian principles within a French dramatic framework 25 Works editUnless otherwise stated in the footnotes the following list of Sacchini s works is drawn from the biographical summary by Georges Sauve Sauve 2006 27 The list of works is still incomplete mainly as far as non operatic music is concerned Operas edit Title Genre Acts Premiere place Premiere date Revisions and notable revivalsFra Donato intermezzo 2 acts Naples 1756Il giocatore intermezzo Naples 1757Olimpia tradita 28 commedia Naples 1758Il copista burlato commedia Naples 1759La vendemmia intermezzo 1 act Rome 1760 Revised for Barcelona in 1767Il testaccio opera buffa Rome 1760I due fratelli beffati commedia Naples 1760Andromaca opera seria Naples 30 May 1761La finta contessa farsetta Rome 1761Li due bari opera buffa Naples 1762L amore in campo dramma giocoso 2 acts Rome 1762Alessandro Severo opera seria 3 acts Venice Carnival 1763Alessandro nell Indie opera seria Venice 1763Olimpiade opera seria 3 acts Padua 1763 Revived in Paris in 1777 as a pasticcio with music by Sacchini under the title L olympiade to a translation by N E FramerySemiramide riconosciuta opera seria 3 acts Rome 1764Eumene opera seria Florence 1764Lucio Vero opera seria Naples 4 November 1764 Partly revived in London in 1773 as a pasticcioIl finto pazzo per amore intermezzo 2 acts Rome 1765 Multiple revivalsCreso opera seria 3 acts Naples 1765 Revised for London in 1774 and under the new title of Euriso in 1781La contadina in corte opera buffa Rome 1765 Multiple revivals London 1782 L isola d amore dramma giocoso 2 acts Rome 1766 Revived in Paris in 1775 to a translation by N E Framery entitled La colonie as a pasticcio with music by Sacchini in the form of an opera comique The original Italian version was also revised for London in 1776 while the French one was furtherly reworked in German in 1779Le contadine bizzarre 29 Milan 1766Artaserse opera seria 3 acts Rome 1768Il Cidde opera seria 3 acts Roma 1769 30 Nicoraste opera seria 3 acts Venice 1769Scipione in Cartagena opera seria Munich 8 January 1770Calliroe opera seria Ludwigsburg 1770L eroe cinese opera seria Munich 1770Adriano in Siria opera seria Venice 1770Ezio opera seria Naples 1771Armida opera seria 3 acts Milan and Florence 1772 Revised for London in 1780 as RinaldoVologeso opera seria Parma 1772Il Cid opera seria London 19 January 1773Tamerlano opera seria London 1773Perseo opera seria 3 acts London 1774Nitteti opera seria 3 acts London 1774Montezuma opera seria 3 acts London 1775Didone abbandonata 31 opera seria London 1775Erifile opera seria 3 acts London 1778L amore soldato dramma giocoso 3 acts London 1778 Revived in Paris in 1779 Sacchini s debut at the Paris Opera L avaro deluso o Don Calandrino dramma giocoso 3 acts London 1778Enea e Lavinia opera seria 3 acts London 1779Mitridate opera seria London 1781Rosina 32 London 1783Renaud 33 opera tragedie lyrique 3 acts Paris 1783Chimene tragedie lyrique 3 acts Fontainebleau 1783Dardanus 34 tragedie 4 acts Paris 1784Œdipe a Colone 35 tragedie lyrique 3 acts Versailles 4 January 1786Arvire et Evelina unfinished completed by Jean Baptiste Rey tragedie lyrique 3 acts Paris 1788Operas written in collaboration with other musicians edit In this section are listed the operas containing original music by Sacchini and by other composers Niccolo Piccinni Le donne dispettose Naples 1754 uncertain Le trame per amore Naples 1759 uncertain Il curioso imprudente Naples 1761 36 La massara spiritosa Naples 1761 Il Cavalier partigiano Naples 1762 Fedele Fenaroli I due sediarii Naples 1759 37 Baldassare Galuppi Villano Venice 1762 38 Tommaso Giordani Le vicende della sorte 1770 39 Instrumental music edit Nearly all instrumental music published by Antonio Sacchini dates from his London years 1772 1781 Most of the works listed below first published in London were later reprinted in Paris and elsewhere 2 sinfonias printed in Paris in 1767 40 Periodical Overture n 49 in 8 parts Bremner London 1776 41 6 trio sonatas for two violins and basso continuo Op 1 London Bremner 1775 6 string quartets Op 2 London 1778 6 sonatas for harpsichord or piano and violin Op 3 London 1779 6 sonatas for harpsichord or piano and violin 2nd set of favourite lessons Op 4 London 1780Sacred music edit Sacchini s sacred works were composed for the most part during his directorship at the conservatoire of the Ospedaletto in Venice Significantly all Venice compositions are in major tonality 42 1761 Gesu presentato al tempio oratorio Naples 1764 L umilta esaltata oratorio Naples 1766 L abbandono delle richezze di San Filippo Neri oratorio Bologna 43 1768 II popolo di Giuda liberato della morte per intercessione della regina Esther oratorio Venice 1768 Magnificat in D major Venice 1768 Salve Regina in G major antiphon Venice 1768 Fremo gemendo in poena in B major psalm Venice 1768 Sicut lilia in valle amoena in F major psalm Venice 1769 Mass in D major Kyrie gloria Venice 1769 Te Deum in D major Venice 1769 Habet amor suas procellas in D major Venice 1769 Aurae de caelo in B major Venice 1769 Charitas omnia vincit modi sacri motet Venice 1769 Paventi ut nautae in G major psalm Venice 1770 Salve Regina in F major hymn antiphon Venice 1770 Machabaeorum mater azione sacra actio sacra Venice 1771 Ave Regina caelorum in F major hymn antiphon Venice 1771 O quam carae et quam beatae silvae psalm Venice 1771 Jephtes sacrificium azione sacra actio sacra Venice 1772 Miserere in E nbsp major psalm Venice 1772 Regina caeli in D major antiphon Venice 1772 Missa solemnis in D major Kyrie gloria credo Venice 1772 Cor serba te fidelem in F major psalm Venice 1772 Nuptiae Ruth azione sacra actio sacra Venice 1786 Juditta oratorio ParisUndated but traceable back to the Venetian period 1768 1772 Ave Regina caelorum in E nbsp major hymn antiphon Venice Regina caeli in B major antiphon VeniceSalon vocal music edit Georges Sauve reports that there exist numerous works not yet catalogued in Italy in London including nine 1775 duets in Paris in Dublin ariettas which were published long after his death arias cantatas There also exists Fanny Bazin s Music Book 44 a completely unpublished handwritten collection by Antonio Sacchini dating back to 1785 and currently belonging to Sauve himself a descendant of Madame Bazin It contains 19 melodies 16 for piano and soprano 1 for piano solo 1 duet for two sopranos and a quartet and is due to be published by ELPE Musique Le Cahier de musique de Fanny Bazin The book was used in the lessons Sacchini gave to the 11 year old Bazin at the behest of Queen Marie Antoinette 45 and is witness to the refinement and intensity of the artistic life that Queen Marie Antoinette shared with those close to her 46 Notes and references edit Sauve 2006 p 15 a b c d e f g h DiChiera 1997 p 114 a b c d e f Caruselli vol IV p 1087 Sauve 2006 pp 26 27 Dorsi amp Rausa 2000 p 167 Sauve 2006 p 30 See Giuseppe Ellero Maria Carla Paolucci Jolanda Scarpa ed Arte e musica all Ospedaletto Schede d archivio sull attivita musicale degli Ospedali dei Derelitti e dei Mendicanti di Venezia sec XVI XVIII Venice Stamperia di Venezia Editrice 1978 The Present State of Music in France and Italy or The Journal of a Tour through those Countries undertaken to collect Materials for a General History of Music By Charles Burney Mus D second edition London Becket Roeson and Robinson 1773 pp 184 185 Jorg Riedlbauer Tommaso Traetta Opere Bari Palomar 2008 ISBN 9788876002519 a b Sauve 2006 In 1780 there appeared Rinaldo a reworking of a previous opera Armida see below with reference to Renaud The staging of this opera seria at the Comedie Italienne was highly unusual and in fact a violation of the long standing legal agreement which reserved the performance of tragic operas for the Academie Royale de Musique et de Danse Jullien 1878 pp 15 et seq Pitou 1985 pp 482 483 Lajarte 1878 p 311 Bruce Carr Banti Brigida Giorgi in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera cit I p 304 It was less than ten years since Gluck had succeeded in breaking the century old monopoly French or naturalised French had exercised over the repertoire of the Opera cf DiChiera 1997 p 114 Caruselli p 1087 Dorsi amp Rausa 2000 p 167 Dizionario dell opera article on Renaud Jullien 1878 p 61 Phedre was in fact performed at court on 26 October Revue et gazette musicale de Paris 1833 number 12 Quoted in Florimo 1869 pp 426 427 The quotation by Florimo as well as the one by Jullien 1878 pp 103 104 refers to a period of three months between Marie Antoinette s announcement and Sacchini s death Since such a lapse of time is obviously incongruous with the other available facts Sauve took the trouble to check Berton s original report in the library of the Opera and discovered that he had actually written three days The date is also confirmed by a letter reproduced as a photograph by Sauve 2006 pp 113 115 this was written 69 years after the events by Francoise Fanny Bazin at the time a young reader to the queen she was the daughter of Charles Bazin the intendant of the queen s Menus Plaisirs and she too gives direct and clear evidence about what happened Sauve 2006 pp 121 122 Lajarte 1878 p 355 Œdipe a Colone Chœur de Chambre et Orchestre de la Camerata de Bourgogne conducted by Jean Paul Penin Dynamic 2005 Opera Lafayette Orchestra and Chorus conducted by Ryan Brown Naxos 2006 Renaud Les Talens Lyriques conducted by Christophe Rousset Ediciones Speciales 2013 a b c DiChiera 1997 p 115 Dorsi amp Rausa 2000 p 168 The sources from which Sauve states he has drawn his information p 143 are as follows DiChiera 1997 Thierstein i e a dissertation produced at the University of Cincinnati in 1974 and apparently never published Eldred A Thierstein Antonio Maria Gaspero Sacchini and his French operas Hochstein i e Wolfgang Hochstein de Musikforschung am Ospedaletto zu Venedig zur Zeit Antonio Sacchinis Die Musikforschung 1987 40 320 337 Roberto Zanetti i e probably La musica italiana nel Settecento Busto Arsizio Bramante Editrice 1978 Sauve 2006 s list reports the erroneous title of L Armida tradita Cited by Opera Glass Sauve 2006 erroneously antedates in 1764 the production of the opera under the title of Il Gran Cidde as stated by Dennis Libby Cidde Il in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera cit I p 862 Cited by Sauve 2006 and by Opera Glass The New Grove Dictionary of Opera reports this work along with 1770 Le vicende della sorte as just containing music by Sacchini Music in Reported by Sauve 2006 but not cited by DiChiera 1997 score PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 2006 05 27 score PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 2006 05 27 score PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 17 Retrieved 2006 05 27 Stated by DiChiera 1997 too No mention of the collaboration is made by Siegfried Gmeinwieser R in his article Fenaroli Fedele in Grove Dictionary II p 152 No mention of the collaboration is made by Dale E Monson in his article Galuppi Baldassare in Grove Dictionary II p 340 Monson just cites among the original operas by Galluppi a 1762 work bearing the similar title of Il marchese villano Reported as a pasticcio by Irena Cholij in her article Giordani Tommaso in Grove Dictionary II p 426 and as containing music by Sacchini Music in by DiChiera 1997 cf footnote above According to Sauve 2006 this piece of information is taken from Grove i e probably in this case The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians The Periodical Overture was an editorial initiative by Robert Bremner consisting in publishing periodically new overtures by different composers In the programme were involved over a period of twenty years 1763 1783 such musicians as Thomas Arne Karl Friedrich Abel Johann Christian Bach Luigi Boccherini Christian Cannabich Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf Christoph Willibald Gluck Francois Joseph Gossec Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi Joseph and Michael Haydn Ignaz Holzbauer Niccolo Jommelli Niccolo Piccinni Gaetano Pugnani Franz Xaver Richter Johann Schobert Johann Stamitz Johann Baptist Vanhal Cf David Wyn Jones Robert Bremner and The Periodical Overture Soundings University College Cardiff Press VII 1978 p 63 84 The composition titles containing forms of the Latin word caelum heaven are reported by Sauve 2006 in such correct classical spelling and it is also the form used today in official liturgical books In his list of Sacchini s sacred works Sauve 2006 identifies Rome as the first performance place p 146 whereas he had previously stated Bologna p 30 In fact in Bologna at the local Congregation of the Oratory is preserved the manuscript of the work which incidentally was performed in 2007 during the event Creator Faenza Musica Sacra Creator Faenza Musica Sacra amadeusonline net archived The dedicatee of the book is Francoise Fanny Bazin already mentioned above in a footnote an ancestor of Sauve and the former holder by inheritance of Sacchini s own copy of the original edition of Œdipe a Colone which was utilized by ELPE Musique Archived 2013 09 21 at the Wayback Machine for the modern edition of the opera Cf the review of Sauve s breviaire biographique by Emmanuelle Pesque in ODB Opera Passion 2007 Le Cahier de musique de Fanny BazinSources editBibliography edit Caruselli Salvatore ed Grande enciclopedia della musica lirica in Italian Rome Longanesi amp C Periodici DiChiera David 1997 Sacchini Antonio Maria Gasparo Gioacchino In Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol IV New York Oxford University Press pp 114 116 ISBN 978 0 19 522186 2 Dorsi Frabrizio Rausa Giuseppe 2000 Storia dell opera italiana in Italian Turin B Mondadori ISBN 978 88 424 9408 9 Florimo Francesco 1869 Cenno storico sulla scuola musicale di Napoli Del Cavalier Francesco Florimo archivista del Real Collegio di musica in S Pietro a Majella in Italian Naples Lorenzo Rocco Jullien Adolphe 1878 La Cour et l Opera sous Louis XVI Marie Antoinette et Sacchini Salieri Favart et Gluck D apres des documents inedits conserves aux Archives de l Etat et a l Opera in French Paris Librairie Academique Didier OL 14017446M Lajarte Theodore de 1878 Bibliotheque Musicale du Theatre de l Opera Catalogue Historique Chronologique Anecdotique in French Vol I Paris Librairie des bibliophiles Pitou Spire 1985 The Paris Opera An Encyclopedia of Operas Ballets Composers and Performers Rococo and Romantic 1715 1815 Westport London Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 24394 8 Sauve Georges 2006 Antonio Sacchini 1730 1786 Un musicien de Marie Antoinette Breviaire biographique in French Paris L Harmattan ISBN 2 296 01994 3 Online sources edit in Italian Dizionario dell opera article on Renaud in French ELPE Musique Œdipe a Colone This article contains material translated from the equivalent article in the Italian WikipediaExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antonio Sacchini Free scores by Antonio Sacchini at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Antonio Sacchini in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Literature by and about Antonio Sacchini in the German National Library catalogue 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