Michelangelo Falvetti (29 December 1642 – May or June 1697[1]) was an Italian Baroque composer as well as a Catholic priest.

Falvetti was born in Melicuccà in Calabria, Kingdom of Naples on 29 December 1642, but spent most of his life and musical career in the Kingdom of Sicily. In 1670, he became Maestro di Cappella in Palermo, and in 1679 founded the 'Unione dei Musici' in that city.[2] In or around 1682 he moved to Messina where he was named Maestro di Cappella by the Senate of Messina. Little is known about Falvetti's life after he gave up his post of Maestro di Cappella in 1695. He probably died in Messina in May or June 1697.[1]

Works, editions and recordings

edit

Works written in Palermo:

  • Abel figura dell'agnello eucaristico (1676)
  • La spada di Gedeone (1678)
  • La Giuditta (1680)
  • Il trionfo dell'anima (16??)

Works written in Messina:

  • Il diluvio universale (1682) - includes sung parts for Noah, Rad, Water, Death, Divine Justice, God, Human Nature, - recording Leonardo García-Alarcón, La Cappella Mediterranea, Choeur de chambre de Namur. Ambronay 2011
  • Il Nabucco (1683) - recording Leonardo García-Alarcón, La Cappella Mediterranea, Choeur de chambre de Namur. Ambronay 2013
  • Il sole fermato da Giosuè (1692)

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Giuseppe Antonio Martino, "Michelangelo Falvetti. Un grande calabrese cui spetta un posto di primo piano nella musica italiana del Seicento" (in Italian) [Michelangelo Falvetti. A great Calabrian who deserves a prominent place in 17th century Italian music], Corriere della Piana, no. 94, 2021, pp. 34-36.
  2. ^ Giuseppe Donato Polifonisti calabresi dei secoli XVI e XVII Coro polifonico S. Paolo di Reggio Calabria, Reggio di Calabria 1985
edit