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Giovanni Bononcini (or Buononcini)[1] (18 July 1670 – 9 July 1747) (sometimes cited also as Giovanni Battista Bononcini)[2][3] was an Italian Baroque composer, cellist, singer and teacher, one of a family of string players and composers.

Portrait of the composer by Anthoni Schoonjans
Portrait of the composer by Anthoni Schoonjans

Biography



Early years


Bononcini was born in Modena, Italy, the oldest of three sons. His father, Giovanni Maria Bononcini (1642–1678), was a violinist and a composer, and his younger brother, Antonio Maria Bononcini, was also a composer. An orphan from the age of 8, Giovanni Battista studied in the music school of Giovanni Paolo Colonna at San Petronio Basilica in Bologna (perhaps in 1680 or 1681).[4][5]

In 1685, at the age of 15, he published three collections of instrumental works (in two of which he gave his age as 13).[5] On 30 May 1686, he was accepted as a member of the prestigious Accademia Filarmonica di Bologna.[4] His services were already much in demand: he worked at San Petronio as a string player and singer, published further collections of instrumental pieces, and produced two oratorios for performance in Bologna and Modena.[4] From 1687 to 1691 he served as maestro di cappella at the church of San Giovanni in Monte in Bologna, for which he composed a set of masses) for double choir which were published in 1688 as his op.7.[4][5] In 1690 he composed a further oratorio for Modena. He also spent some time in Milan in 1689 and 1690.[5] In 1691 he dedicated a set of vocal duets (op. 8) to Emperor Leopold I and played in the orchestra of the Cardinal Legate of Bologna, Benedetto Pamphili.[4]


Rome


Caricature of the composer by Pier Leone Ghezzi
Caricature of the composer by Pier Leone Ghezzi

In the same year, he moved to Rome, where he entered the service of Filippo II Colonna, a powerful patron of the arts, for whom Bononcini, along with Colonna's librettist, Silvio Stampiglia, produced six serenatas, an oratorio and at three (possibly five) operas between 1692 and 1696, including the highly successful Xerse (1694).[4][5] Another successful opera, Il trionfo di Camilla was produced in Naples (in 1696 or 1697) following the appointment of Colonna's brother-in-law, Luigi della Cerda, as Spain's local viceroy.[4][5] Between 1695 and 1696, Bononcini was made a member of two of Rome's most exclusive artistic circles, the musical Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and the literary Accademia degli Arcadi (in which he was one of seven musicians proposed as founding members of a "chorus", or performance arm).[4] Around this time, the eclectic musician and poet Giuseppe Valentini wrote a sonnet in praise of Bononcini's teaching abilities.[4]


Vienna and Berlin


Following the death of Colonna's wife Lorenza in August 1697, Bononcini left Rome for Vienna, where he entered the service of Emperor Leopold I with a large salary and also established himself as the favoured composer of Leopold's heir and successor, Joseph.[4] In 1702, following the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession Bononcini moved to the court of Queen Sophia Charlotte in Berlin, where he became the queen's favourite composer and broadened his public reputation with a production of a new opera, Polifemo (he also composed Cefalo there).[4][5]

Although his activities in the next decade are less well documented, he appears to have been in Venice for the production of a new opera during the carnival of 1706.[4][5] By this time Bononcini had an enviable international reputation: in the words of his fellow composer Francesco Geminiani, Camilla had "astonished the musical world by its departure from the dry, flat melody to which their ears had until then been accustomed".[4] By 1710, productions of Camilla (presumably based on Bononcini's version) had reached London as well as many cities across Italy.[4] At some time during this decade on one of his sojourns to Italy, he married Margherita Balletti. She came from a family of actors and commedia dell'arte players and was the sister-in-law of Luigi Riccoboni.[1]


London


From 1720 to 1732 he was in London, where for a time his popularity rivaled George Frideric Handel's, who had arrived in London in 1712. The Whig party favored Handel, while the Tories favored Bononcini.[2] Their competition inspired the epigram by John Byrom that made the phrase "Tweedledum and Tweedledee" famous. Handel steadily gained the ascendancy, and Bononcini became a pensioner of the Duchess of Marlborough, who had led his admirers.[2] Bononcini left London after charges of plagiarism were proven against him: he had palmed off a madrigal by Antonio Lotti as his own work.[3]


Final years


After leaving London in 1733, Bononcini travelled to France in the company of an adventurer, Count Ughi, who swindled him out of most of his property. In Paris Bononcini gave concerts of his religious music at the Concert Spirituel and then moved on to Lisbon to become the cello teacher to the Portuguese king. In 1736 he returned to Vienna, where his opera Alessandro in Sidone and his oratorio Ezechia were performed in 1737. In dire financial straits by 1742, he petitioned Maria Theresa of Austria for help. In October of that year she granted him a pension of 50 Florins a month in recognition of his past service to the court. Bononcini died on 9 July 1747 in Vienna, impoverished and largely forgotten. After his death, his last major composition, a Te Deum which he had composed in 1741 for Francis I, was performed in celebration of the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.[1]


Compositions


His earliest works for the cello are two Sinfonie included in a manuscript in Montecassino.[6] His other works include a number of operas, masses, and a funeral anthem for the Duke of Marlborough. One of his operas, Xerse, parodied material in an earlier setting of that opera by Francesco Cavalli. This included the aria "Ombra mai fu". Bononcini's Xerse was in turn later adapted by Handel with a third (and best known) version of "Ombra mai fu". His song Vado ben spesso cangiando loco was used by Franz Liszt in his suite for piano Années de pèlerinage: Deuxième année: Italie.


Operas


First page of manuscript from Astianatte, ca. 1727
First page of manuscript from Astianatte, ca. 1727

Serenatas



Componimenti


Adapted from the listing at Silvio Stampiglia page

Other works



References


  1. Frajese, Carlo (1970). "Bononcini, Giovanni". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Vol. 12. Online version retrieved 2 October 2015 (in Italian).
  2. Ripley, George; Dana, Charles A., eds. (1879). "Bononcini, Giovanni Battista" . The American Cyclopædia.
  3. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bononcini, Giovanni Battista" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  4. Bennett, Lawrence E; Lindgren, Lowell. "Bononcini: (2) Giovanni Bononcini". Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 26 September 2013.(subscription required)
  5. Ford, Anthony (July 1970). "Giovanni Bononcini, 1670-1747". The Musical Times. 111 (1529): 695–697. doi:10.2307/956529. JSTOR 956529.(subscription required)
  6. Guido Olivieri. "Due sonate per violoncello di Giovanni Bononcini in un manoscritto napoletano". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)



На других языках


[de] Giovanni Bononcini

Giovanni Bononcini, gelegentlich auch Giovanni Buononcini oder fälschlich[1] Giovanni Battista Bononcini (* 18. Juli 1670 in Modena; † 9. Juli 1747 in Wien), war ein italienischer Cellist und Komponist.
- [en] Giovanni Bononcini

[es] Giovanni Bononcini

Giovanni Battista Bononcini (Módena, 18 de julio de 1670 – Viena, 9 de julio de 1747). Compositor y violonchelista italiano del Barroco, miembro de la escuela napolitana.[1]

[ru] Бонончини, Джованни Баттиста

Джованни Баттиста Бонончини (итал. Giovanni Battista Bononcini; 18 июля 1670 года, Модена — 9 июля 1747 года, Вена) — итальянский композитор, виолончелист-виртуоз, из известной музыкальной семьи Бонончини. Музыке обучался у своего отца, Джованни Марии Бонончини и, позднее, у болонского композитора Паоло Колонна.



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