Everything about Felice Anerio totally explained
Felice Anerio (
1560 –
September 26 or 27,
1614) was an
Italian composer of the late
Renaissance and early
Baroque eras, and a member of the
Roman School of composers. He was the older brother of another important, and somewhat more progressive composer of the same period,
Giovanni Francesco Anerio.
Life
Felice Anerio was born in
Rome and lived his entire life there. He sang as a
boy soprano at the Julian Chapel (the
Cappella Giulia) from
1568 until
1577 (by which time he was an
alto), and then he sang at another church until
1580. Around this time he began to compose, especially
madrigals; this was one of the few periods in his life during which he wrote secular music. Likely he was influenced by
Luca Marenzio, who was hugely popular at the time and who was in Rome at the same time Anerio began composing. By
1584 Anerio had been appointed
maestro di cappella at the Collegio degli Inglesi; he also seems to have been the choirmaster at another society of Rome's leading musicians called the
vertuosa Compagnia de i Musici di Roma. These positions must have given him considerable opportunity to exercise his compositional talents, for he'd already written the music, songs, madrigals and choruses, for an Italian
Passion play by this time. In
1594, he replaced
Palestrina as the official composer to the papal choir, which was the most prominent position in Rome for a composer.
In
1607 or shortly afterwards he became a
priest (a common career path for a composer in the Roman School). In conjunction with
Francesco Soriano, another composer of the Roman School, he helped to reform the
responsories of the
Roman Gradual, another of the late activities of the
Counter-Reformation in Italy.
Works
Anerio was a conservative composer, who largely used the style of Palestrina as a starting point, at least after his youthful period of writing secular works, such as madrigals and
canzonettas, was done. Nevertheless he achieved an expressive intensity which was his own. Some influence of the Northern Italian progressive movements is evident, though muted, in his work, for instance the use of double choirs (
polychoral works were the norm in
Venice); quick
homophonic declamatory textures; quick melodic passages in the bass line (which were an influence from
monody). In addition he sometimes liked quickly changing textures, alternating between full chorus and small groups of two or three voices, another progressive trait of the northern Italian schools (this trait is much evident, for example, in the music of
Claudio Monteverdi).
In his very last works the influence of
Viadana, the popularizer of the
basso continuo, is evident, but he still remained true to the Palestrina style in his melodic and harmonic writing. Anerio wrote no known purely instrumental music.
Many magnificats, hymns, motets and other works were printed by K. Proske in his
Musica Divina (1854).
Works by Felice Anerio included:
Sacred Vocal
- Two books of Madrigali Spirituali (both Rome, 1585)
- Two books of sacred hymns (Venice, 1596 and Rome, 1596)
- Holy Week Responsories (for four voices, Rome, 1606)
- 13 Spiritual canzonettas; 12 motets, including many for 8 voices; psalms, litany, other works, many including a basso continuo
- Madrigals, choruses, solo songs for Passio de Nostro Signore in verso heroico (Viterbo, 1604)
Secular Vocal
One book of canzonettas (1586)
Five books of madrigals (one of which is lost) (1587, 1590, 1598, 1602, unknown)
Miscellaneous other madrigals not included in the main publications
References and further reading
Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0-393-09745-5
Article Felice Anerio, in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2Further Information
Get more info on 'Felice Anerio'.
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