Alessandro Stradella
Alessandro Stradella, (born April 3, 1639, near Viterbo [Italy]—died February 25, 1682, Genoa), Italian composer, singer, and violinist known primarily for his cantatas.
Stradella apparently lived for periods in Modena, Venice, Rome, and Florence. In Turin in 1677 an attempt was made to murder him, for reasons that are not known, though it was believed to be at the instigation of a Venetian senator with whose fiancée Stradella had eloped. A document in Modena confirms his murder in 1682.
Stradella was one of the finest composers of chamber cantatas, of which 174 survive, both secular and for religious observance (e.g., Christmas Cantata); his fresh, mellifluous melodies are frequently supported by harmonies bolder than are usually found in music of this period. Particularly interesting in his instrumental music is his novel application of concerto grosso texture to accompaniments of arias in some of his stage works and oratorios. Stradella’s legendary life, embroidered from conjecture and scanty facts, was the subject of eight 19th-century operas and of at least one novel.
Learn More in these related Britannica articles:
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cantataSuch composers as Alessandro Stradella, Mario Savioni, Giovanni Legrenzi, and their students made the cantata a regular feature of aristocratic musical life in the courts of Rome and elsewhere in Europe. Alessandro Scarlatti was the major figure of the last main group of Italian cantata composers.…
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serenataAlessandro Stradella was one of the first composers of serenatas (
Qual prodigio è ch’io miri, c. 1675); he was followed by Alessandro Scarlatti, George Frideric Handel, and most other composers of the late 17th and 18th centuries. One of the most enduring and well-known examples… -
OratorioOratorio, a large-scale musical composition on a sacred or semisacred subject, for solo voices, chorus, and orchestra. An oratorio’s text is usually based on scripture, and the narration necessary to move from scene to scene is supplied by recitatives sung by various voices to prepare the way for…


