3528D PDF
3528D PDF
3528D PDF
2013
by
Jason A. Orsen
Jason A. Orsen
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Table of Contents
Chapter
Bibliography……………………………………………………………………………………..48
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Outline
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I. Introduction
This study will focus on the Double Concerto style of Bologna, Italy, in the seventeenth
century. Comparing various works from the basilica of San Petronio will show how the double
concerto evolved. Keeping the research focused primarily on a specific area and church will
provide a consistent analysis between styles of works and articles and books about San Petronio,
Maestri di Cappella and other musicians will provide source material. Through this approach,
this paper will determine whether the basilica, outside composers or the local musicians’
technique influenced the composer of each work. This project will shed light on the large
number of double concertos created and performed at San Petronio. This study will help me
Bologna was a focal point for musicians in the early part of the seventeenth century. The
basilica of San Petronio provided tremendous opportunity for musicians to create and perform
new works. Students at the University of Bologna as well as local musicians performed there,
creating a positive musical environment. In this context, double concerti from Bologna
bloomed.
San Petronio in the period, with 33 surviving works for one trumpet, 45 for two trumpets and
five for four trumpets.1 The number of pieces written for two trumpets suggests the popularity of
this style of writing to this specific area of Bologna. Giuseppe Torelli represented the majority
of the total pieces written for one and two trumpets, but Francesco Manfredini, Ferdinando
Lazzari, Petronio Franceschini and Giuseppe Aldrovandini wrote almost exclusively for two
1 Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1721 (Buren, The Netherlands:
Uitgevrij Frits Knuf, 1988), 100.
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instruments. Even though Franceschini’s piece for two trumpets was called a “sonata,”
composers used the terms sinfonia, concerto and sonata interchangeably. They implied no
particular difference in the formal construction of the piece during this time at Bologna.
Three parts comprise this dissertation: (1) examination of several double concerti from
Manfredini, focusing on chronological progression and influence from Baroque composers of the
time; (2) examination of the role that performers’ skill played in the composers’ works; and (3)
probing the question of why so many double concerti for trumpets were written at the basilica of
San Petronio. I will cover the details of Italian Baroque style, physical dimensions of the basilica
of San Petronio, performance practices at San Petronio, profiles of Maestri di Cappella and
musicians at the basilica and the compositional style of the Italian Double Concerto.
Little has been written about the double concerto in Italy during the Baroque era.
Numerous double concerti were written for several different instruments at this time such as the
violin, oboe and trumpet. This dissertation focuses on works for the trumpet.
My project will focus exclusively on Bologna and composers from San Petronio. As one
of the leading areas in musical culture and with such a large number of double concerti written in
one place and time, this focus befits a project examining a consistent progression of the Double
Two methods of research serve this project. The first method for the research phase will
be examination. I will examine many compositions from Bologna, paying careful attention to
cadential and stylistic material. This will help when comparing double concerti to determine
different styles, development and harmonic structure. This is also important for determining
each composer’s unique style as opposed to the role that musicians’ skills played in composition.
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The second method of research will be comparison. This method will be used to flesh
out the most important material in order to display a clear progression of the double concerto. I
will use compositions related to the Bologna area for this purpose. This research method will
also help with gathering information on important stylistic differences between the composers
and noticing different tendencies from one to another. Examples of this would include
comparing the use of imitation, unison, fanfare and fugal material in the trumpet parts to the
string parts in order to demonstrate how they correlate with each other. Additional points of
comparison will be figuration, the use of third intervals between compositions and identifying
larger stylistic differences that make each one distinct. For example, compositions such as
Franceschini’s Sonata for Two Trumpets could be compared with earlier works such as the first
sonatas ever written for trumpet by Maurizio Cazzati. By examining and using stylistic study, it
is evident that Franceschini’s style became more refined and complex over this 15 year time span
when compared to Cazzati’s sonatas. The Franceschini Sonata is less homophonic than
Cazzati’s works, it has evolved into a clear four movement plan and the range of the trumpet has
been increased a minor third from b’’ to d’’. The Franceschini Sonata had more variety, and the
trumpets were treated to richer harmonies. The trumpets offered a bel canto melody in the slow
third movement, as well as sounding fanfares in the fourth movement without any
accompaniment supporting them. These select characteristics in the Franceschini were very
I have gathered a large number of books, articles, dissertations and liner notes concerning
San Petronio, Maestri di Cappella, musicians, Italian Concerto style and composers at Bologna
during the Baroque period. This is to ensure a thorough examination of all research concerning
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For example, the book The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Paolo
Colonna (1674-95) by Marc Vanscheeuwijck examines the acoustical effect and dimensions of
San Petronio and how he believes this may have influenced San Petronio’s composers’ style.2 I
believe that San Petronio’s interior influenced composition even more than the technique of
musicians at the composers’ disposal. Vanscheeuwijck’s book also discusses the three most
important Maestri di Cappella of San Petronio, though it mainly focuses on Giovanni Paolo
Colonna’s time at the basilica. Vanscheeuwijck also explores stylistic preferences of some San
Petronio composers based on the acoustical qualities of the vast nave of the basilica. He argues
that because the major third is faintly created by playing an open fifth on the organ, composers
would lightly emphasize the major third in an ensemble or chorale setting because of its strong
presence. This source stimulated my interest to look more in depth at the influences of the
interior dimensions of the church as opposed to the local musicians skill-set regarding
compositional style. With this in mind, my project would take an in-depth look at the influence
of San Petronio’s interior but also expand the idea of compositional influence based on the local
Richard Maunder.3 This book explains the common structure of Baroque concertos from
different regions such as Italy, Germany, Holland and England with different schools of thought.
This will help me compare concertos identify common and uncommon characteristics of the
Baroque concerto. However, Maunder points out characteristic and influential differences
strictly through representations of the score. My project will compare and contrast compositions
2. Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003)
3. Richard Maunder. The Scoring of Baroque Concertos. Woodbridge, UK: The Boydell Press, 2004.
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and literature, but also look at outside influences such as layouts of churches, acoustical
properties and the level of the musicians’ skill in the surrounding area of Bologna.
Another excellent source is The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet Before 1721
by Don Smithers.4 Although this book explores the details of trumpet performance in the
Baroque era, I focused attention on the section on “The Bolognese School” for trumpet music.
Smithers compares the St. Mark church with San Petronio’s spacious interior, leaving
imaginative placements for musicians. Smithers also offers great detail on the composers,
Maestri di Cappella, discussion about double concerti for trumpet and the importance of Bologna
as a leading area in musical culture at this time for instrumental music. While Smithers does an
excellent job of describing certain stylistic qualities in each composition, my project expands this
informs this paper.5 The author describes the church’s vast space, exploring interesting
acoustical problems and describing their relevance to the performing practices at San Petronio.
Schnoebelen describes the apse, a semicircular projection located at the top of the church, as an
almost perfect sound chamber that renders music heard with clarity. While performing, the choir
heard muddy sounds from the nave, an “unintelligible mixture of echoes” sounding through the
basilica. Schnoebelen states that the nave was so vast that only the sounds from the trumpet or
the solo voice could penetrate with clarity. Schnoebelen also traces the trumpet’s popularity in
the 1650’s in Bologna under Cazzati through the payment records of the number of trumpet
players compensated during ceremonial feasts at the basilica. The patronal feast generally
4. Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1721 (Buren, The Netherlands:
Uitgevrij Frits Knuf, 1988)
5. Anne Schnoebelen, “Performance Practices at San Petronio in the Baroque,” Acta Musicologica 41
(January-June, 1969)
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included at least one and often two trumpets. Under those payment records, Giovanni Pellegrino
Brandi’s name appears through 1699 as a trumpet player, and Schnoebelen hypothesizes that
Franceschini, Torelli and Perti wrote their sonatas for him because the records show many
Michael Talbot’s article “The Concerto Allegro in the Early Eighteenth Century”
compares writing styles of several Italian composers including Torelli, Vivaldi, Albinoni, Corelli
and Jacchini.6 The article uses comparisons of compositional techniques such as ritornello and
fugue within the Venetian and Bolognese schools. In his examination of the Bolognese school,
Talbot uses concerto examples by Torelli to point out his use of Fortspinnung, a fugal technique,
and his use of ritornello. My project will also point out certain composers’ use of attributes such
as imitation, unison and fugal technique while focusing on one specific area.
6. Michael Talbot. “The Concerto Allegro in the Early Eighteenth Century.” Music & Letters 52, No. 2
(April, 1971)
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II. The Basilica of San Petronio
sinfonias and concertos for trumpets were performed at San Petronio than at any other place in
Europe during the mid to late baroque. This emphasis on trumpet primarily reflected acoustical
conditions at San Petronio rather than composers’ interest in symbolism. The trumpet is one of
the few instruments whose sound could carry and penetrate the vast nave of San Petronio.8
Composers favored the trumpet because of its sound, rather than its virtuosity.
Located in the center of Etruscan Italy, Bologna was surrounded in very short distances
by Florence, Ferrara, Modena and Ravenna. The basilica of San Petronio and the University of
Bologna made Bologna a center for intellectual and artistic creativity from the eleventh century.9
From the twelfth through fifteenth centuries, the student population ranged from three to
five thousand, including the famous scholars Dante Alighieri and Petrarch.10 The University
itself had no fixed residences at the time. Professors taught most classes out of their homes up
until the mid sixteenth century. Its reputation and stature gained over the years, and the
University achieved incorporation with its own buildings in 1562 under the direction of Cardinal
Carlo Borromeo.11 The University continued to thrive over the years while cultural elements
proliferated in the city. The baronial church of San Petronio provided a place for worship and
7. Don L. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1721 (Buren, The Netherlands:
Uitgevrij Frits Knuf, 1988), 92.
8. Edward H. Tarr, The Trumpet (Chandler: Hickman Music Editions, 2008), 84.
11. Ibid.
11
Even today, San Petronio, named after the city’s patron saint, is one of the most
impressive churches in Italy. The well organized archives stand as a center of research for both
instrumental and vocal music of the seventeenth century. The church has two very large organs
right above the choir in stalls that face each other. Completed in 1476 and 1596 respectively,
these organs have been preserved to their original construction. The cantoria or balcony was
constructed after the completion of the apse in the 1660’s, and was able to hold 80 to 100
musicians.
Construction of San Petronio began in 1390. The church itself measured 384 feet in
length and 157 feet in width. Initial plans projected the basilica at nearly 850 feet in length, 460
feet across and nearly 500 feet high at the crossing. Historians suggest political turmoil
instigated by jealous ecclesiastics in Rome and Milan, who feared losing influence to Bologna,
prevented completion.12
The interior balconies of the basilica of Saint Mark in Venice and their particular
placement of musicians influenced composers’ writing styles.13 I believe the basilica of San
Petronio also influenced composition. San Petronio has two fundamental acoustical phenomena:
an extremely long reverberation time in the nave of the church and the faint generation of a pure
When a musician produces a pitch and its fifth on the organ in San Petronio, resonance
naturally creates a faint major third. This directly influenced composers to avoid doubling vocal
or brass orchestration parts that produced the third in a chord because of the natural presence it
already produced.
12. Smithers, The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet, 94.
13. Ibid.
12
One chord at the organ demonstrated the reverberation that produces a 12 second
reverberation. Depending where a musician stood in the nave of the church, he experienced an
above in the choir balcony, he would enjoy clearly articulated music, since the sound waves
flowed from above. In addition, the musicians standing in the horse-shoe shaped choir balconies
needed to perform with colleagues almost 110 feet away, making simultaneous ensemble playing
production extremely difficult.14 The large sound delay would cause each group to sound later
than the other groups to the people listening in the audience. This made it imperative to focus on
Musicians and composers of the seventeenth century relied heavily on their ears for
balance and the appropriate use of instrumentation while writing music. This paper will consider
several factors that might have influenced the composers’ style. Even though the acoustics have
not been scientifically proven, the experiences of San Petronio and the use of basic principles for
have been on concert halls rather than immense gothic churches. Because of this, I will not be
Reverberation time can vary a good deal between concert halls, but San Petronio’s is
unusually long. The optimal reverberation time for a speaking room is usually no more than a
14. Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 59-66.
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second; concert and opera halls should be approximately up to two seconds. Reverberation time
Other scholars have acknowledged the importance of reverberation time in San Petronio,
available to the composer for producing a musical effect and as such is actually a
part of the music. Some styles of music depend on the tying together of
successive tones to produce their over-all effect. Many early choral compositions,
and lose much of their power. Early composers often wrote pauses into the music
The Order of 1658, mandated that singers in San Petronio could not leave the Cappella before
Petronio space. People and draperies could be a factor a live performance; in the seventeenth
century the church accommodated on average 6,000 to 9,000 people and an assortment of
draperies hung around the choir. These factors might have cut down on the reverberation
dramatically by absorbing a large percentage of the sound, but Vanscheeuwijck documented and
16. Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 60.
18.
Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 63.
14
measured the reverberation time of 9.6 seconds during the concerts held on the feast day of San
Petronio in the years 1986–1991. While it is impossible to know the reverberation time at a
given concert in the seventeenth century, it seems obvious that a long reverberation of 9.6 to 12
San Petronio also does not produce an echo due to the absence of a dome present in most
basilica. Vanscheeuwijck confirmed that no echo was present during his visit at the basilica. The
picture below showed the view from the top of San Petronio.
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19
Vanscheeuwijck also documented that the third of any major triad decays last and sounds the
loudest in the chord. Producing an open fifth chord in San Petronio reveals a slight production of
frequency produced within the harmonic series called an overtone. A final minor triad creates a
clash with the non-generated major third, creating dissonance. Because of this, seventeenth
century Bolognese music never has a minor third in a final chord. This pattern reflects the
19. http://www.campingcompass.com/article/interesting-things-to-see-in-
bologna&docid=xkQNmvJ0OCsAgM&imgurl
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Surrounding materials such as wall surfaces more easily absorb lower frequencies from
frequencies because they “enter resonance” easier, which dissipates the energy of incoming
sound waves.20 Composers tended to increase the numbers at lower frequencies to offset this
absorption. Higher voices such as the trumpet resist absorption. The trumpet’s bright sounds
made it one of the few instruments able to penetrate the great space of the nave. The extremely
The long reverberation qualities of San Petronio complemented the trumpet nicely, but it
also provided some compositional limitations. Some composers such as Petronio Franceschini
embraced the long reverberation and used it to their advantage. These composers took advantage
of the long reverberation by avoiding extremely long phrases between instruments and
maintaining it with shorter motifs. Franceschini’s music keeps the imitative polyphony simple
and short between a pair of voices or instrumentalists. Repeated rhythmic figures like the
opening of Franceschini’s sonata for two trumpets allows the bright penetrating sound of the
trumpet to work with San Petronio’s acoustics. The trumpets made this effect much clearer if a
Current research suggests San Petronio’s acoustics did influence the style of
frequency because the long reverberation did not hinder them. The trumpet’s popularity
increased at San Petronio for feast ceremonies and other special occasions requiring a flattering
20.
Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 65.
21. Anne Schnoebelen, “Performance Practices at San Petronio in the Baroque,” 54-55.
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sound.22 The synergistic effect with San Petronio’s reverberation time made all instruments that
introduced to the cappella musicale of San Petronio. At first, instruments only appeared with
vocal ensembles at special occasions such as feasts. In 1657 Maurizio Cazzati became the
Maestro di Cappella and began taking instrumental music more seriously.23 Cazzati’s
appointment marked the beginning of a period of where instrumental music thrived. This
momentum carried over to Giovanni Colonna’s appointment in 1658, which enhanced the
instrumental and vocal balance. Giacomo Perti continued to improve the traditions of Bologna’s
instrumental music starting in 1696, and as a result attracted some of the finest musicians to the
then became Maestro di Cappella and organist of San Andrea, Mantua in 1641, and the
Accademia della Morte at Ferrara in 1648. By this time, Cazzati had a successful performance at
San Salvatore near Bologna, which helped him win the position at San Petronio in 1657. San
Petronio’s trustees officially appointed Cazzati Maestro di Cappella at San Petronio on August
31, 1657, after leaving his last position in Ferrara.24 Cazzati determined to restructure the
Capella with a new perspective on discipline and organization. To achieve these goals, Cazzati
asked the Fabbriceria, the board of trustees of the church, for permission to appoint a vice
22. Anne Schnoebelen, “Performance Practices at San Petronio in the Baroque,” 41.
23. Ibid 38.
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maestro, release the current musicians and create an audition process to hire based on merit. He
began to reform the cappella musicale, increasing the permanent membership to 35 singers and
instrumentalists, which performed for various functions for the church year. In addition to
restructuring the Cappella, Cazzati would hire extra musicians during special feast occasions and
increased the musicians’ rate of 50 lira to 109 lira. Bolognese traditionalists objected, but
Cazzati attracted new talent. San Petronio likely would not have become prominent without
him.25
Cazzati had always won popularity and acclaim in his career. However, his reforms at
San Petronio brought fierce criticism and scrutiny. As early as 1658 an anonymous letter
detailed “musical errors,” calling the musical style “too verbose” in the Kyrie of Cazzati’s Missa
primi toni (1655). Lorenzo Perti wrote a similar letter in 1659 for academic discussion, again
criticizing the musical style and use of mode within Cazzati’s Kyrie. The newly appointed
organist of San Petronio, Guilio Arresti ran to Cazzati’s defense but he was unpublished and
Cazzati did reprint the Mass in response to the criticism with “corrections” but did not
revise the use of the first mode. This controversy persisted over the years and it probably caused
Cazzati’s dismissal from San Petronio in 1671. At this time, Cazzati returned to the cathedral of
Mantua as Maestro di Cappella; he continued to publish oratorios for various feasts in the area
25. Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003)
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Cazzati’s works provided significant contributions to the Bologna area and also to
trumpet literature. Cazzati published the first three sonatas written for trumpet, strings and basso
continuo in 1665. He did have concern about the trumpet’s range as reflected in his keeping the
range conservative from a’ to a” for these first three sonatas. He wrote all three sonatas—La
Caprara, La Zambecari and La Bianchina—for C trumpet, paving the way for to define trumpet
Giovanni Paolo Colonna became Maestro after Cazzati. He was born in Bologna
on June 16, 1637, and two surviving letters document that he studied counterpoint with Antonio
Maria Abbatini, Orazio Benevoli and Giacomo Carissimi. When he studied counterpoint in
Bologna, Colonna’s father, San Petronio’s organ tuner, trained him as an organ builder and
eventually took on many of his duties as an organ tuner and builder in San Petronio. After
completing his education, Colonna became second organist in San Petronio on September 6,
1658.27 In 1661, Colonna temporarily served as the only organist in the basilica due to a
discharge of Guilio Arresti, never served as first organist. Following the death of Colonna’s
father in 1666, he became organ tuner on September 4. In 1674, after several voting sessions
over six candidates for the newly appointed position of Maestro di Cappella, the board of trustees
During his first couple of years as chapel master, Colonna maintained a choir of 15
singers and an ensemble of 11 instrumentalists. During his tenure, the total number of musicians
fluctuated between 25 and 30 during Easter and other main festivities, but fell during the
December-January period due to musicians’ leaves of absence. Colonna routinely hired extra
27.
Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 133-135.
28.
Ibid, 138.
20
musicians for larger festivals and to expand the cappella. In 1679–1681, Colonna hired between
97 and 101 musicians. After this period, San Petronio’s board of trustees, wanting to control
costs, dictated that he could not hire more than 50 musicians in the “Fabbriceri decree.”
However Colonna disregarded the decree, hiring another 60 musicians in 1681 for the San
Petronio festival. Colonna sought to give a good impression and did so by organizing and hiring
musicians at a much higher rate. Following these years, Colonna ceded to pressure from the
Fabbriceria and did not hire more than 90 musicians for the rest of his tenure.29
According to payment lists and to Franceschini’s dated compositions, Colonna was the
first Maestro to hire trumpet players for the festivities of the patron saint. Excluding the years of
1681, 1689 and 1695, Colonna hired one or two trumpet players for the San Petronio
celebrations every year during his tenure. Between 1676 and 1680, Colonna regularly hired
trombonist Antonio Negri for vespers and mass of the San Petronio feast, thus resulting in an
increase of Musici di Palazzo to seven, which altered the timbre of the string ensemble but also
1685, however, Colonna tarnished his reputation with a brief dispute with Angelo Corelli. This
altercation began when Colonna’s students asked whether Corelli had erred in composing the
three parallel fifths in the Allemende of his third sonata. Colonna, unable to determine an
answer, wrote a cautious letter concerning the matter. Corelli responded irritably and
sarcastically. Fortunately, these actions did not have a negative impact on Colonna’s career but
raised some questions amongst the Roman musicians. Many composers and musicians spoke out
29.
Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 140-141.
30. Ibid, 146.
21
in support of Colonna’s position. But, the feud’s long period in public notice had a negative
The final seventeenth century Maestro di Capella of San Petronio was one of the most
influential. Giacomo Antonio Perti (b Bologna, 1661; d Bologna, 1756) served for 60 years at
San Petronio, reaching a high level of fame as a composer and teacher. As a teacher, Perti
influenced some prominent musicians such as G.B. Martini, Aldrovandini, Torelli, F.O.
At an early age, Perti studied the basics of organ playing in Bologna. Perti then began to
study singing in 1670 and began to study counterpoint with Petronio Franceschini in 1675. A
major arrival point in 1680 was his composition of Mass in D with two trumpets. Martini
praised Perti throughout his career; written records of the time say he called the Mass in D with
two trumpets the first of its kind. The following year, San Petronio’s trustees appointed Perti
Perti’s career had been extremely successful; he applied to be vice maestro at San
Petronio in 1689. In the conflict between Colonna and Corelli, Perti sided with Corelli, arguing
the consecutive fifths were not an error. Colonna’s irritation about this likely prevented Perti’s
appointment to vice maestro at San Petronio. However, the trustees selected Perti was as
Maestro di Cappella of San Petronio in 1696 and he spent the rest of his life there.33
31.
Marc Vanscheeuwijck, The Cappella Musicale of San Petronio in Bologna under Giovanni Paolo
Colonna (1674-95), (Brussels-Rome, 2003), 147-149.
32. Grove online, “Giacomo Perti.”
33. Ibid.
22
The following list illustrates the progression of the orchestra at San Petronio in terms of
size. It provides the maximum and minimum amount of musicians during the regular services
List 1.35
Violoni 1 2 1
Violoncellos 1 1—2 1
Organs 2 1—2 1
During the feast of San Petronio or other special occasions throughout the year, the
Maestro di Capella would hire up to 180 musicians. Many of the extra musicians came from
around the area and the Accademia Filarmonica. Records do not always specify the instrument
35. Ibid.
23
or voice of these extra musicians, but the following list reflects the records and receipts used for
List 2.37
Sopranos 8 3 11
Contraltos 6 3 9
Tenors 12 4 16
Basses 13 6 19
Violins 11 2 13
Violas 1 2 3
Tenor Violas 0 2 2
Double Basses/Violoni 3 1 4
Theorbos 1 1 2
Organs 1 2 3
Violoncino 1 0 1
Trombones 1 2 3
58 28 8
37. Ibid.
24
List 3.38
Sopranos 10 3 13
Contraltos 10 4 14
Tenors 13 5 18
Basses 16 4 20
Violins 7 3 10
Violas 3 1 4
Tenor Viola 0 1 1
Violonzino (sic) 2 2 4
Violins 1 2 3
Trombones 6 1 7
Trumpets 4 0 4
Organs 2 2 4
Theorbos 2 1 3
Cornetto 1 0 1
77 29 106
38. Anne Schnoebelen, Performance Practices at San Petronio, 43
25
List 4.39
Sopranos 7 2 9
Contraltos 4 6 10
Tenors 13 5 18
Basses 12 6 18
Violins 7 3 10
Violas 6 1 7
Tenor Viola 0 1 1
Violoncellos 2 1 3
Violini 5 1 6
Trombones 8 2 10
Trumpets 2 0 2
Organs 2 2 4
Theorbos 4 1 5
Cornetto 2 0 2
74 31 105
39. Anne Schnoebelen, Performance Practices at San Petronio, 43
26
The following list show the minimum and maximum amount of musicians hired for the feast of
List 5.41
Sopranos 3—12
Contraltos 1—10
Tenors 8—26
Basses 13—24
Violins 10—30
Violoncellos 4—9
Violas 6—18
Violoni 3—12
Trombones 2—6
Theorbos 0—3
Organs 1—4
Trumpets 0—4
Cornetti 0—4
Oboes 0—4
Bassoons 0—4
Horns 0—2
40. Anne Schnoebelen, Performance Practices at San Petronio, 43
41. Ibid.
27
While increasing the higher voices over the years within the ensemble, the Maestros
increased both the vocal and instrumental lower voices to compensate. The heavy support from
the bass voices supported the powerful echoes from the higher voices within San Petronio. An
early list of salaries from 1595 shows four trombones, one cornetto and one violin.42 The list of
trombones increased to seven in 1610, playing an important part in the San Petronio Orchestra.
The implementation of heavy bass use progressed well into the eighteenth century.
42. Anne Schnoebelen, Performance Practices at San Petronio, 44.
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IV. Composers and Musicians of San Petronio
abundance of performers at their disposal. Bologna composers had up to 123 ripienists during
the early eighteenth century. With this in mind, I believe the composers that had access to many
musicians surrounding the highly cultured Bologna area may have influenced their writing style.
As a result, the composers’ compositional style and musicians became a product of their
Perti had up to a tremendous opportunity with the large number of performers at their disposal.
For the purpose of this project, I will be listing the primary members that helped the St. Petronio
capella and Accademia dei Filarmonica ascend to its notable reputation in Bologna.
The primary composers associated with the trumpet in Bologna are Pirro d’Albergati,
Manfredini, Giacomo Perti and Giuseppe Torelli. These composers contributed a great deal to
the trumpet repertoire in Bologna. Eighty-three instrumental works with trumpet have been
found in San Petronio. As previously stated, 33 survive for one trumpet, 42 for two trumpets and
five for four trumpets.43 No surviving works were scored for three trumpets.
The main members of the San Petronio orchestra and Accademia Filharmonica begin
with Maurizo Cazzati (1620-1677) as Maestro di Cappella at San Petronio in 1657. Before
settling in Bologna, Cazzati held positions at courts around his birthplace of Guastalla. He had
considered living and working in Venice where some of this work was published, but decided on
Bologna and his influence was tremendous. During his career, Cazzati published a substantial
43. Don L. Smithers, “The Music and History of the Baroque Trumpet before 1721” Buren 100, 1988
29
amount of instrumental music. He was also amongst the Italian composers whose works Purcell
Giovanni Maria Bononcini (1642-78) came from Modena where he had a short career as
the cathedral director. He was a notable musician from a musical family but was also a reputable
composer. During his stay in Bologna, Giovanni was a member of the famous Academia
Filarmonica and a student of Colonna. His thirteen publications emphasize chamber music,
including titles such as “Sonatas,” “Concerto Grosso” and “Sinfonias.” For example, his Op. 1
“I primi frutti del giardino musicale” contains sonatas for two violins and continuo. As a result,
Bononcini became the first prominent musician of his family and was known as “the creator of
Giuseppe Aldrovandini (1665-1707) spent most of his life in Bologna and was appointed
principe of the Accademia Filarmonica in 1702. During his tenure at the academy, he studied
counterpoint and composition with Perti and made significant contributions to the trumpet
repertoire with his trumpet sonatas. In addition, Aldrovandini provided creative ways to
implement winds and brass into the orchestra during a period when the continuo was the
standard accompanying texture. He used winds and brass as accompaniment texture as well as
Petronio Franceschini (1650-1681) served as cellist in the orchestra of San Petronio from
1675 to 1680 and as one of the first members and acting presidents of the Accademia
Filarmonica. Franceschini wrote for many different categories of music including operas,
cantatas, oratorios and church and instrumental music. Franceschini also composed one work for
44. Arthur Hutchings, “Baroque Concerto” Faber and Faber 69. 1959
45. Ibid, 70
46. Arthur Hutchings, “Baroque Concerto” Faber and Faber 73. 1959
30
the trumpet literature in 1680—the Sonata in D for two trumpets. This work has an important
place in the Italian trumpet literature, because it represents progress and the transition between
Maurizio Cazzati’s first sonatas for trumpet in 1665 to the evolving compositions of Torelli,
Domenico Gabrielli (1655-1690) played cello for the San Petronio orchestra and became
a member of the Accademia Filarmonica. Gabrielli was extremely proficient on the cello and
composed the earliest music for cello. He began to implement the cello as an obbligato
instrument in his trumpet sonatas and vocal works. He composed his trumpet sonatas for one or
two trumpets with orchestra specifically written for San Petronio. The sonatas consisted of the
Bolognese tradition, which consisted of four to six movements, each alternating from slow to
fast. This style of writing became extremely popular in the Bologna area in the late 17th century.
Giuseppe Torelli (1658-1709) joined the Accademia Filarmonica in 1684 and the San
Petronio orchestra as a violist. Torelli left the Bologna area during the breakup of the San
Petronio orchestra in 1696. No documents describe his travels but he returned to the newly
reformed San Petronio orchestra in 1701, resuming as a violinist under Perti’s direction.
Torelli’s virtuosity on the violin and his many accomplishments as a composer made him
famous.
Torelli became San Petronio’s most important composer, writing a total of 42 works for
trumpet. He wrote 17 for one trumpet, 23 for two trumpets and two for four trumpets.47 Torelli
produced four publications of chamber music works entitled sonatas, sinfonias and concertos
between 1686 and 1692. His interest in trumpet likely followed these publications. Like the
other composers at San Petronio, Torelli favored the trumpet for its majestic sound rather than its
47. Don Smithers, “The music and history of the Baroque Trumpet,” 100.
31
virtuosity. These composers wrote generally up to the thirteenth partial to place the focus on the
The Bolognese composers’ work showed recognition of the strength and endurance
trumpet demands. For example, Bolognese composers tended to write a call and echo between
trumpets and strings, plenty of rest between phrases and a low tessitura. If the Bolognese
composers had access to virtuoso trumpet players, I believe the style of writing would have
changed dramatically. Johann Sebastian Bach had access to virtuoso trumpet players Gottfried
Reiche and Christoph Ruhe. This allowed Bach to compose with longer phrases, fluidity and
higher tessitura. Some of Bach’s works for trumpet, such as Brandenburg concerto no.2 and
Mass in B minor, pose tremendous difficulty for even today’s trumpet player using modern
equipment.
Jean Berger’s article “Notes on Some 17th-Century Compositions for Trumpets and
Strings in Bologna” focuses on concertos that have unusual combinations for trumpet, strings
and figured bass, including trumpet in pairs by Perti, Torelli and Franceschini. With a few
exceptions, these concertos never appeared in print because San Petronio was the only place in
Bologna that used many trumpet works. As a result, only a few of the manuscripts had dates.
However, Petronio Franceschini dated a sonata for two trumpets 1680. Four movements instead
of three, and the use of trumpets in the inner movements, also made the Franceschini sonata
distinctive.
San Petronio compositions used trumpets pitched in C and D, with most of the parts
written in D. Cazzati’s 1665 work shows a limited range on the instrument until Franceschini
extended it in his Sonata a 7 in 1680 by a fourth higher. Berger’s article also describes some of
the composers’ tastes, describing how some favored the trumpet in pairs and others favored a
48. Edward Tarr, “The Trumpet,” 84.
32
single trumpet. It also examines pieces by Torelli and an anonymous composer. One piece by
Torelli presents four instruments, pairing two trumpets against two oboes, with the string
orchestra also split into two sections. The article also takes up compositional styles, such as the
use of imitation and fugue within these pieces for paired trumpets.
33
V. The Italian Double Concerto
The meaning of concerto has changed since the seventeenth century. Compositions in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries used the term in conjunction with sonata and canzona.
Concertos of the period might include a Franceschini sonata, Corelli concerto grosso, Torelli
violin concerto or a Monteverdi madrigal. For example, Francesco da Milano’s Fantasia for
Two Lutes refers to the second lute as the concerted or concerto lute (liuto in concerto).
compositions compiled for double chorus and instrumental accompaniment at St. Mark’s in
Venice. Adriano Banchieri published a similar compilation in 1595 that consisted of eight part
motets for double chorus with instrumental accompaniment. By contrast, Giovanni Gabrieli
began to use a new compositional technique, grouping a choir of high brass instruments with a
choir of low brass and strings in his famous composition Sonata piano e forte (1597). This was a
defining moment of the “concerto” using color between choirs. Ludovico Viadana took it one
step further when he published his first volume of Ecclesiastical Concertos in 1602. This volume
of concerti by Viadana brought the double chorus with instrumental accompaniment down to not
The natural trumpet was limited to a single overtone series which limited the thematic
material of many seventeenth and eighteenth century compositions. In some unique instances,
few virtuoso performers could reliably produce notes beyond the natural harmonics. The natural
trumpets’ rising capabilities and limitations produced certain idiomatic figures composers soon
49. Abraham Veinus, The Concerto (London: Cassell, 1948) 1.
50. Ibid. 2-3
34
applied to other instruments, which often became thematically repetitive, using the characteristic
style of the Italian sinfonia and concerto. The Bolognese trumpet literature features few
compositions with long melodic stretches. Bolognese composers wrote idiomatically for the
trumpet and showed their empathy for the performer’s capacity by writing in numerous rests.
Most of the compositions for trumpet at this time were simple in key structure due to the
instrument being restricted to its harmonic series. The trumpet sections maintain attraction
through antiphony, rhythmic vigor and counterpoint. In many of the double concertos for
trumpet, the pairing of thirds and echo formula was the compositional style for the Bolognese.
The many composers within Bologna that often used the echo formula within the trumpets and
Many of the trumpet works scored for more than one trumpet introduce the thematic
ideas in the first principal movement and the last movement. The instruments might not share
these thematic ideas; the melodic material was introduced between the trumpet and strings very
sparingly. Most compositions assigned the trumpet and the strings each their own melodic
material during an introduction. If the first movement extends with a second thematic idea, it
may be pronounced antiphonally between strings and trumpets. The first movement of the
Within the first movement of Manfredini’s double concerto for trumpet, the strings
display the first primary theme with a long octave leaping to the tonic-dominant motive which
stretches out over nine bars. A quaver-semiquaver motive introduces the principal thematic
material for the trumpets in bar 10. In most double concertos, this motive carries out the
trumpets by thirds and play sequentially with the strings until the trumpets states the second
theme. The trumpets and strings play this statement back and forth until the development
35
section. Then the secondary motive ends the first movement with the trumpets replaying the
theme.
G.B. Bononcini became interested in trumpet sonatas by the age of 15. Because of this
early interest, he learned the technical difficulties of the trumpet and his approach to the
counterpoint and concerto style reflects this knowledge. He composed four works for the
trumpet, dedicated to his mentor Colonna. He wrote two works for solo trumpet and five string
parts with continuo (Sinfonia Quinta a 6’ and Sinfonia Ottava a 6’). He wrote the other two
works for two trumpets with five string parts plus continuo (Sinfonia Nona a 7’ and Sinfonia
The trumpet’s popularity in Bologna grew during the 1650’s; Cazzati’s influence
facilitated its prominence as a solo instrument. Before coming to Bologna, Cazzati worked for
the Duke of Sabbioneta at Bozzolo, and this may have exposed him to the famous trumpet player
Orfeo Gentilini, who lived near Sabbioneta. Gentilini’s trumpet ability may have impressed
Cazzati and thereby influenced his first set of sonatas for the trumpet.52 Although history does
not record whether Cazzati first introduced the trumpet as a solo instrument to Bologna, his
sonatas for trumpet and strings certainly popularized the use. This important moment opened up
many avenues for the trumpet and composers writing for one, two and four trumpets with
accompaniment. The tradition of adding another instrument with violins and oboes to make a
concerto for two or four solo instruments naturally accommodated the trumpet’s majestic and
powerful sound as the additional instrument. Additional soloists not only added volume to pierce
51. Hutchings, “Baroque Concerto,” Faber and Faber, 71.
52. Ibid.
36
VI. Performance Practice Issues-Ornamentation
For performers of the Renaissance and Baroque eras, improvisation and spontaneity
became very important elements. Musicians improvised various aspects of music because
composers rarely indicated interpretation and performance criteria. Musicians may have
determined the articulations, vibrato, pitch level, instruments, voices and dynamic changes.
Tradition encouraged performers to ornament, embellish or improvise to the best of their ability
to enhance a work.53
In Italy, composers used vague ornament markings if they used them at all. On the other
side of the spectrum, French composers specified much more elaborate ornamentation in their
improvisation. Because of this, I found it important to choose works from one area when
Sylvestro Ganassi wrote the first printed treatise concerning ornamentation and
presented the first method of melodic improvisation, known as diminution. Composers used
diminution in melodic passages to make it more interesting than the composers’ notes; they
saved more elaborate figures for the cadences and slower movements.55
characteristic of Baroque melody. Excerpt 1 shows written out diminutions taken from Sylvestri
53. Ben Bechtel, “Improvisation in Early Music” Music Educators Journal (January, 1980) 110.
54. Ibid.
55. Ibid.
37
Excerpt 1.56
Studying a written passage of diminutions would facilitate learning how to ornament the
transition of one note to the next. Baroque soloists added diminutions at performances during
Compositions such as Franceschini’s Sonata for Two Trumpets could be compared with
earlier works, such as the first sonatas ever written for trumpet by Cazzati. But Franceschini’s
style became more refined and complex over the course of 15 years. The Franceschini Sonata
was less homophonic than Cazzati’s works, it evolved into a clear four movement plan, and the
range of the trumpet increased a minor third from b’’ to d’’. The Franceschini Sonata had more
variety, and the trumpets were treated to richer harmonies. The trumpets offered a bel canto
melody in the slow third movement, as well as sounding fanfares in the fourth movement without
56. Sylvestro Ganassi, Opera Intitulata Fontegara (Venice 1535), (Milano, 1934)
57. Imogene Horsley, “The Diminutions in Composition and Theory of Composition” Acta Musicologica
(September, 1963) 137.
38
any accompaniment supporting them. Other compositions in the Baroque period rarely had these
characteristics.
measure 2 offers a great opportunity for the slide ornament. In the slide, three or more notes
rapidly succeed one another downwards or upwards. Performance of this ornament is always
slurred. In the second trumpet part, a musician can perform the slide by adding an f” and g” that
leads into the a” in beat two. The first trumpet can answer with another slide, beginning on beat
three, adding e”, f”, and g” leading into the a”. This ornament provides a very interesting call
Excerpt 2.58
Excerpt 3.59
Composers generally note a slide with a line above or by using very small notes.
Trumpet students can tend to rush the quickly grouped notes into the next beat, compress the
58. Petronio Franceschini, In Italian 17th & 18th Century Sinfonias & Sonatas for Trumpets & Strings, ed.
Edward H. Tarr, (Monteux, France: Musica Rara, 1968)
59. Johann Ernst Altenburg, Trumpeters’ and Kettledrummers’ Art 1795 (Nashville: The Brass Press,
1974), 112.
39
rhythmic figure and gloss over the smaller notes, making them unclear. But a properly executed
slide gracefully renders every note as clear as the next. Practicing at a slower tempo, hearing
each note before it is played and performing the ornament with a sense of casualness helps
achieve the desired effect. Adding a short trill helps end the phrasing on the dotted eighth note.
The example from excerpt 4, measure 27 of the third movement, offers a nice opportunity
for using messa di voce, which is a crescendo and decrescendo occurring on the same pitch.
Also, adding vibrato as an ornament helps with direction through the crescendo. Using this
technique, adds a colorful transition into the next note. The messa di voce would take place with
Excerpt 4.60
Many students use vibrato all the time, but do not know how to use it effectively. A good
pedagogical technique would be to practice each lyrical study with a straight tone, thus raising
careful attention to specific passages for tasteful use of vibrato in baroque works.
Giuseppe Torelli was an accomplished violinist, teacher and composer. His career had
him traveling to Vienna and Germany but he eventually settled in Bologna as a working
60. Petronio Franceschini, in Italian 17th & 18th Century Sinfonias & Sonatas for Trumpets & Strings, ed.
Edward H. Tarr (Monteux, France: Musica Rara, 1968).
40
musician at San Petronio.61 Torelli was an important figure in the development of the
instrumental concerto and composer for the trumpet. He wrote 15 works for one trumpet, four
for one or two trumpets, seven for two trumpets, eight for two trumpets and two oboes and two
for four trumpets.62 The Sinfonia in D Major (G.21) was originally scored for one or two
trumpets, first and second solo violins, first and second ripieno violins, solo viola, ripieno viola,
passage from measure 86 (see below) which reoccurs throughout the last movement.
Excerpt 5.63
The repeating eighth notes may suggest an appoggiatura on the strong beats of the first two
measures. The musician can also place them on the weaker beats, the second and third notes of
the first two measures from the Altenburg example (Excerpt 7). Excerpt 6 displays possible
61. Giuseppe Torelli, in Critical Commentary, edited by Dr. Carolyn Sanders (Monteux, France: Musica
Rara, 1998), 1.
62. Giuseppe Aldrovandini, Music of San Petronio: Collection of Musical Works from the Basilica of St.
Petronius in Bologna, ed. Edward H. Tarr (Minnesota 1991), 1.
63. Giuseppe Torelli, in Critical Commentary, edited by Dr. Carolyn Sanders (Monteux, France: Musica
Rara, 1998), 10.
41
Excerpt 6.64
The musician can apply the appoggiatura to rising and falling notes, leaping notes and notes
progressing in steps. When performed, they are usually played louder than the principle note and
always slurred.
The Trumpeters’ and Kettledrummers’ Art (1795) by Johann Ernst Altenburg illustrates
the appropriate use and explanation of the appoggiatura in Excerpt 7 with musical context. An
excerpt of the description explaining the use of the appoggiatura reads, “This occurs mainly
when several notes, (a) of equal duration, or (b) of equal pitch follow immediately after one
another. Furthermore, (c) before skips, (d) before staccato notes, (e) at the beginning of a piece,
64. Johann Ernst Altenburg, Trumpeters’ and Kettledrummers’ Art 1795 (Nashville: The Brass Press,
1974), 110.
65. Ibid.
42
Excerpt 7.66
Francesco Manfredini received his musical training in violin from Giuseppe Torelli and
compositional training from Giacomo Perti at San Petronio. Manfredini left Bologna due to
construction at the church around 1696, and accepted a violin position at a church in Ferrara. He
returned to Bologna in 1704 to join the reformed music chapel of San Petronio and the
Accademia Filarmonica.67 Manfredini wrote only one work for trumpet, a double concerto.
The Franceschini Sonata could also be compared to the three movement Manfredini
Concerto, which uses more of a Bolognese tradition, with the solo instruments active in only the
outer movements. Manfredini mimics Torelli, his former teacher, by placing the middle
movement in a minor key and having it end in a Phrygian cadence leading into the final
movement. The string parts carry most of the main thematic material in the movements, while
the trumpets add support and color with their unison entrances. These factors made Manfredini’s
concerto, more of a concerto grosso with prominent trumpet parts than a true trumpet concerto.
reoccurs numerous times throughout the first movement. This could set up an inverted mordent
66. Johann Ernst Altenburg, Trumpeters’ and Kettledrummers’ Art 1795 (Nashville: The Brass Press,
1974), 110.
67. Ibid.
43
Excerpt 8.68
The pedagogical process includes isolating the trouble spots, and practicing the more difficult
ornaments slowly. Experimenting with new ornament placements allows the student to study
each ornament and decide which placements are more appropriate and tasteful than others. This
also allows the performer to prepare for spontaneous embellishments during a performance.
The Art of Baroque Trumpet Playing: Exercises from the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis by
Edward Tarr addresses the difficulty of the trill.70 Tarr states that he doesn’t intend his exercises
as mandates “to perform trills as mechanically as possible or like a machine. When we can ‘do’
them properly, we will also be able to start them slowly and gradually speed them up, in which
68. Francesco Manfredini, Concerto con una o due Trombe (1711), ed. Edward H. Tarr (Cologne 2004), 2.
69. Johann Ernst Altenburg, Trumpeters’ and Kettledrummers’ Art 1795 (Nashville: The Brass Press,
1974), 111.
70. Edward H. Tarr, Art of Baroque Trumpet Playing: Exercises from the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis
(Chandler: Hickman Music Editions, 2008).
44
way a ‘musical’ feeling is generated.”71 Fortunately, modern trumpet players have the help of
valves to produce the trill and do not have to rely exclusively on the strength of our embouchure
and speed of air for trill production, but precise execution still requires practicing with a
metronome. This helps the musician avoid the three most common deficiencies in modern
execution of ornamentation: (1) longer trills stop before execution of their terminations; (2) the
beginning of the trill is anticipated; (3) and the note of destination is slurred to the trill. Excerpt
10 is an example exercise from the Tarr book to refine the execution of the trill.
Excerpt 10.72
This exercise example can be transposed up a step to the next octave to cover several partials.
A supplemental method which may prove helpful Jean-Claude Veilhan’s The Rules of
Musical Interpretation in the Baroque Era which contains a section on German, French and
Italian ornamentation.73 The book provides insight and illustrates specific musical excerpts of
original and written out ornamentation examples. For example, the Italian ornamentation section
illustrates several examples of how Johann Quantz and Giuseppe Tartini decorated musical
excerpts using various ornamentations. It also provides specific definitions and examples of
71. Edward H. Tarr, Art of Baroque Trumpet Playing: Exercises from the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis
(Chandler: Hickman Music Editions, 2008). 48
72. Ibid.
73. Veilhan, Jean-Claude. The Rules of Musical Interpretation in the Baroque Era. Trans. by John
Lambert. Paris: Alphonse Leduc, 1979.
45
ornamentations in various musical contexts. This information will provide students several ways
Jean Baptiste Arban’s Complete Conservatory Method for Trumpet also addresses the
trill and other ornamentation. It offers a chapter on ornamentation containing brief explanatory
notes and many musical studies on the appoggiatura, trill, mordent and the turn.74 Arban
provides informative descriptions and many different exercises of specific ornaments in different
rhythmic variations and key signatures. The trill exercises benefit the performer with excellent
finger dexterity due to some cross fingering passages, but Arban also provides alternate
ornaments in baroque works, Arban’s book is an excellent source for preparing proper execution
baroque ornamentation.75 Topics covered include the origin of the appoggiatura and appropriate
placement, various kinds of trills and how to use them and appropriate use of vibrato and the
mordent. Tartini provides thorough explanations of each topic including musical examples of
appropriate and inappropriate ornament placements. He also describes various placements of the
trill at cadences, descending and ascending stepwise passages and adding possible passing
appoggiaturas if a particular trill provides time. Tartini also describes placing the trill on specific
beats when encountering slurred notes and ascending and descending notes by step.
74. Jean B. Arban, Arban’s Complete Conservatory Method for Trumpet (New York: Carl Fischer, 1982).
75. Giuseppe Tartini, “Treatise on Ornamentation,” Journal of Research in Music Education (Autumn,
1956).
46
Conclusion
skill. The information I gathered from Vanscheeuwijck and Schnoebelen show that the
reverberation and acoustics posed composers a difficulty. Composers had to be mindful when
delegating the number of instruments or voices to a part to achieve the correct balance. A bass
heavy approach supported the upper voices; composers assigned fewer people to the third of a
The information obtained, supports a correlation between the talent of the musicians in an
area and the style composers have selected. Depending on the occasion, composers tended to
stay within the known limitations of the instrument and performer. The talent of a particular
trumpet player influenced the style even when a composer sought to challenge a musician to
exceed past performances. A composer’s experience may influence his choices, as when the
talented trumpet player Orfeo Gentilini influenced Maurizio Cazzati to begin to write solo
trumpet works.
Overall, San Petronio’s acoustics enhanced the popularity of the trumpet’s powerful
majestic sound. This inspired composers to write solo and paired pieces for the trumpet. My
research did not pinpoint the first official double concerto for trumpet, but I believe it closely
followed the introduction of Cazzati’s first trumpet sonatas to the Bologna area. This helped
establish the trumpet as a soloistic instrument for one, two and four trumpets.
47
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