Giacomo Giuseppe Saratelli
Giacomo Giuseppe Saratelli (1682-1762) was an Italian organist, composer and maestro di cappella.[1]
Life
He was born and raised in Bologna, where he premiered his first work (an oratorio) in 1699 and was trained as an organist. He moved to Padua in 1714 and in 1736 succeeded Antonio Lotti as chief organist at St Mark's Basilica in Venice. In 1740 he became Vice Maestro of the Cappella Marciana. From 1732 to 1739 he was choirmaster of Venice's Ospedale dei Mendicanti, one of the era's most prestigious music schools. In 1747 he became Maestro di Cappella at St Mark's, a post he held until his death in Venice in 1762.
Works
Sacred music
- 150 psalm settings, including:
- Laudate pueri (Psalm 112), for choir, orchestra and basso continuo
- Ad Dominum cum tribularer (Psalm 119)
- Levavi oculos meos (Psalm 120)
- Ad te levavi oculos meos (Psalm 122)
- Nisi quia Dominus (Psalm 123)
- Qui confidunt (Psalm 124)
- Oratorios:
- La regina Ester (Queen Esther)
- Maddalena Conversio (Mary Magdalene Converted; libretto by Carlo Goldoni)
- Veni creator spiritus (Come Creator Spirit; for three voices)
- A collection of important partimenti for harpsichord or organ (surviving copies now in Venice, Milan, Münster, Berlin and Munich)[2]
References
- ^ "Giacomo Giuseppe Saratelli on MusicBrainz".
- ^ Scores and libretti by Giacomo Giuseppe Saratelli on the International Music Score Library Project, Project Petrucci LLC.
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- Johannes de Quadris (1463)
- Pietro de Fossis (1491)
- Adrian Willaert (1527)
- Cipriano de Rore (1563)
- Gioseffo Zarlino (1565)
- Baldassare Donato (1590)
- Giovanni Croce (1605)
- Giulio Cesare Martinengo (1609)
- Claudio Monteverdi (1613)
- Giovanni Rovetta (1644)
- Francesco Cavalli (1668)
- Natale Monferrato (1676)
- Giovanni Legrenzi (1685)
- Giovanni Battista Volpe (1690)
- Gian Domenico Partenio (1692)
- Antonio Biffi (1702)
- Antonio Lotti (1736)
- Antonio Pollarolo (1740)
- Giacomo Giuseppe Saratelli (1747)
- Baldassarre Galuppi (1762)
- Ferdinando Bertoni (1785)
- Bonaventura Furlanetto (1808)
- Giovanni Agostino Perotti (1811)
- Antonio Buzzolla (1855)
- Nicolò Coccon (1871)
- Lorenzo Perosi (1894)
- Pietro Magri (1898)
- Giulio Bas (1899)
- Delfino Thermignon (1900)
- Umberto Ravetta (1921)
- Matteo Tosi (1926)
- Gastone De Zuccoli (1937)
- Luigi Vio (1939)
- Alfredo Bravi (1954)
- Roberto Micconi (1981)
- Marco Gemmani (2000)
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