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==Life== | ==Life== |
Revision as of 14:17, 8 March 2017
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Life
Born: c. 1582
Died: 19 April 1629
Biography
Documentation on d'India is unusually scarce. The title-pages of his publications state that he was of noble Sicilian birth. He was probably a relation, possibly even the son, of Don Carlo d'India, a ‘nobleman of Palermo’ resident in Naples in 1592. Sigismondo may thus have spent his formative years in that city. In the preface to his Musiche of 1609 he stated that from ‘learned men of music’ he learnt ‘how to compose for several voices and how to sing solo’. These mentors may have been part of the circle of composers in Naples affiliated with the academy of Don Fabrizio Gesualdo, the foremost of whom was Giovanni de Macque. D'India probably spent the years 1600–10 travelling about Italy, visiting various courts. He implied in the dedication of his first set of five-voice madrigals (1606) that in 1606 he was in Mantua, where he may have met Monteverdi. From the 1609 preface it is known that in 1608 he visited Florence, where his songs were performed and admired by Vittoria Archilei and Giulio Caccini, and later Rome, where Cardinal Farnese and ‘the most famous musicians and singers’ acclaimed his songs.
In 1611 d'India was appointed director of the chamber music at the court of Carlo Emanuele I, Duke of Savoy, in Turin, where he remained until 1623. Most of his publications date from this period: ten collections of secular music. The emphasis on secular music is a reflection not only of d'India's predilection for it but also of the tastes of the duke, who was a poet and painter and an enthusiastic admirer of the new monodic style. The malicious gossip of certain courtiers forced d'India to leave the court of Savoy in May 1623. After travelling about Italy for five months he settled temporarily at the Este court at Modena from October 1623 to April 1624. He then moved on to Rome to come under the patronage of Cardinal Maurizio of Savoy, his former master's son and another enlightened patron of the arts. In 1625 his sacred opera Sant' Eustachio was performed in Maurizio's palace, and in 1626 he wrote for Pope Urban VIII his Missa ‘Domine, clamavi ad te’, which was performed with great success in the Cappella Giulia. Early in the same year he took a permanent position at the Este court, and in the autumn he directed a mass of his own – possibly the one composed in Rome – for the funeral of Isabella d'Este. In the summer and autumn of 1627 he was competing for the commission of wedding music for the marriage of Duke Odoardo Farnese of Parma to the daughter of Cosimo de' Medici, a commission finally awarded to Monteverdi. A document in Modena dated 19 April 1629 addressed to ‘the heirs of Sig. d'India’ suggests that he died there before that date. —Source: New Grove Dictionary of Music
View the Wikipedia article on Sigismondo d'India.
List of choral works
Liber secundus sacrorum concentuum 1610
Tribus Vocibus
Quatuor Vocibus
Quinque Vocibus
- Domine Dominus noster (Psalm 8 Prima pars)
- Quid est homo (Psalm 8 Secunda pars)
- Pacem relinquo vobis (Prima pars)
- Loquebantur variis linguis (Secunda pars)
- Caritas Dei diffusa est (Tertia pars)
- Qui caelorum contines
- Timor et tremor
- Legem pone mihi Domine (Psalm 27 Prima pars)
- Dirige me (Psalm 27 Secunda pars)
Senis Vocibus
- Quatuor animalia
- Lauda anima mea (Psalm 146 Prima pars)
- Nolite confidere (Psalm 146 Secunda pars)
Liber primus motectorum quatuor vocibus 1627
- In principio creavit Deus
- Hodie Christus natus est
- Exaudi, Deus, orationem meam
- Domine Deus, vite meae
- Gaude Maria Virgo
- Angelus Domini descendit
- Domine prevenisti eum
- Iste cognovit iustitiam
- Exaudi Domine vocem meam
- Ad te Domine levavi animam meam
- Transfige Domine Iesu
- Istorum est regnum coelorum
- Assumpta est Maria in coelum
- Tradent enim vos in conciliis
- Heu mihi Domine (prima pars)
- O Rex meus (secunda pars)
- Circumdederunt me (prima pars)
- O Domine libera animam meam (secunda pars)
- Deus Deus meus respice in me
- Beati immaculati in via
- Veni sponsa Christi
- Sancta Maria ora pro nobis
Madrigals
Il primo libro de madrigali a cinque voci (1607)
- Intenerite voi lagrime mie
- Al partir del mio Sole
- Parlo miser ò taccio?
- Cruda Amarilli
- Ha di Serpe il velen
- Felice chi vi mira; Ben hebbe amica stella
- Fiume ch'à l'onde
- Quasi tra rose è gigli
- Cor mio, deh, non languire
- Ma con chi parl'ahi lassa?
- Che non t'ami, cor mio
- Pur venisti, cor mio
- Interdette speranz' e van desio
- Filli, mirando il cielo
Le Musische a 2 voci di S.d'India - Libro II (1615)
- Alla guerra d'Amore
- Chi nudrisce tua speme
- Cosi per ben
- Gia mai l'alma respira
- Nudrisco il mesto cor
- O leggiadr' occhi
- Porto celato
- Voi baciatrici
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Publications
Madrigals
- Il primo libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1606)
- Libro secondo de madrigali a 5 voci (1611)
- Il terzo libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1615)
- Il quarto libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1616)
- Il quinto libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1616)
- Il sesto libro de madrigali a 5 voci (unknown, presumed lost)
- Settimo libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1624; no copies of the Alto part are known to exist)
- Ottavo libro de madrigali a 5 voci (1624)
Villanelle
- Villanelle alla napolitana, a 3 voci, libro primo (1608)
- Libro Secondo delle Villanesse alla napolitana a 3,4, et 5 voci (1612)
Balli
- Le Musiche e Balli a 4 voci (1621)
Publications for 1 or 2 voices
- Le Musiche di Sigismondo D'India nobile palermitano da cantar solo (1609)
- Le Musiche a 2 voci di Sigismondo D'India (1615)
- Le Musiche del sig. Sigismondo D'India (1618)
- Le Musiche del Cavalier Sigismondo D'India a 1 et 2 voci, libro quarto (1621)
- Le Musiche del Cavalier Sigismondo D'India, libro quinto (1623)
Sacred Works
- Novi concentus ecclesiastici, 1610 [2-3vv)
- Liber secundus sacrorum concentuum, 1610 (3-6vv)
- Liber primus motectorum, 1627 (4-5vv, bc)
External links
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