(Redirected from Giovanni Bononcini)
Giovanni Bononcini
'Giovanni Battista Bononcini' (
18 July 1670 -
9 July 1747) was an
Italian Baroque composer and
cellist, one of a family of string players and composers. His father,
Giovanni Maria Bononcini ((1642-78), was a
violinist and a composer.
Biography
Giovanni Battista Bononcini was born in
Modena, Italy, the oldest of three sons. (His younger brother,
Antonio Maria Bononcini, was also a composer.) Giovanni Battista studied the cello in
Bologna. He then served as maestro di cappella at San Giovanni in Monte and afterwards worked in
Milan,
Rome,
Vienna and
Berlin. From
1720 to
1732 he was in
London, where for a time his popularity rivalled Handel. He left London after charges of
plagiarism were proven against him. He died in poverty in Vienna.
Compositions
He published his earliest works for the cello, his instrument, in
1685 in Bologna. His works other include a number of
operas,
masses, and a funeral anthem for the
Duke of Marlborough. One of his operas, ''Serse'', parodied material in an earlier setting of that opera by
Francesco Cavalli. This included the aria
Ombra mai fu. Bononcini's ''Serse'' was in turn later adapted by
George Frideric Handel with a third (and best known) version of
Ombra mai fu.
Operas
★ ''Il trionfo di Camilla'' (1696)
★ ''L'amore eroica fra pastori'' (1696)
★ ''La clemenza di Augusto'' (1697)
★ ''La fede pubblica'' (1699)
★ ''Cefalo'' (1702)
★ ''Etearco'' (1707)
★ ''Maria fuggitivo'' (1708)
★ ''Astarto'' (1720)
★ ''L'odio e l'amore'' (1721)
★ ''Crispo'' (1721)
★ ''Griselda'' (1722)
★ ''Erminia'' (1723)
★ ''Calphurnia'' (1724)
★ ''Astianatte'' (1727)
★ ''Alessandro in Sidone'' (1737)
Other works
★ ''Messe brevi'' (1688)
★ ''Divertimenti da camera'' (1722)
★ ''XII Sonatas for the Chamber'' (1732)
★ ''Lidio, schernito amante'' (cantata)
External links
★
★
Giovanni Battista Bononcini: a detailed biography
★
Giovanni Bononcini 1670-1747
★