Attilio Ariosti (1666-1729) - Cantata ’Pur al fin gentil viola’
Buon compleanno Attilio Ariosti! 🎭🥂
Composer: Attilio Ariosti (1666-1729)
Work: Cantata ’Pur al fin gentil viola’
Performers: Charlotte Lehmann (soprano); Günther Weiss (viola d’amore); Jürgen Wolf (1938-2014, cello); Theodor Klein (harpsichord)
Painting: Attribué à Alexis Grimou (1678-1733) - La chanteuse tenant une partition
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Painting: Attribué à Alexis Grimou (1678-1733) - Le joueur de flûte
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Attilio (Malachia [Clemente]) [Frate Ottavio] Ariosti
(Bologna, 5 November 1666 - London, before 3 September 1729)
Italian composer, singer and instrumentalist. He joined the order of S. Maria de’ Servi at the Bologna monastery in 1688, took minor orders in 1689, and received his diaconate in 1692. Abandoning the order, he was in the service of the Duke of Mantua in 1696. With Lotti and Caldara, he collaborated on the opera Tirsi (Venice, 1696). In 1697 he went to Berlin as a court composer and staged the first Italian operas there. From 1703 to 1711 he was in the service of the Vienna court. In 1716 he went to London, where he was a composer with the Royal Academy of Music. Among the operas he brought out there were Coriolano (1723), Artaserse (1724), Dario (1725) and Lucio Vero, imperator di Roma (1727). He also published a volum of six cantatas and six lessons for the viola d’amore (1724), on which he was an accomplished performer. These are usually called the Stockholm Sonatas, as the sole surviving source for most of them is in the Statens Musikbibliotek in Stockholm, Sweden. In all, he composed at least 22 operas, instrumental music, five oratorios, and many cantatas.