Animuccia, Giovanni
 ANIMUCCIA,
GIOVANNI, Italian musical composer, was born at Florence in the last
years of the 15th century. At the request of St. Filippo Neri he
composed a number of Laudi, or hymns of praise, to be sung after
sermon time, which have given him an accidental prominence in musical
history, since their performance in St. Filippo's Oratory eventually
gave rise (on the disruption of 16th century schools of composition) to
those early forms of "oratorio" that are not traceable to the
Gregorian-polyphonic "Passions." St. Filippo admired Animuccia so warmly
that he declared he had seen the soul of his friend fly upwards towards
heaven. In 1555 Animuccia was appointed maestro di capella at St.
Peter's, an office which he held until his death in 1571. He was
succeeded by Palestrina, who had been his friend and probably his pupil.
The manuscript of many of Animuccia's compositions is still preserved in
the Vatican Library. His chief published works were Madrigali e
Motetti a quattro e cinque voci (Ven. 1548) and Il primo Libra di
Messe (Rom. 1567). From the latter Padre Martini has taken two
specimens for his Saggio di Contrapunto. A mass from the Primo
Libra di Messe on the canto fermo of the hymn Conditor
alme siderum is published in modern notation in the Anthologie
des maîtres religieux primitifs of the Chanteurs de Saint Gervais.
It is solemn and noble in conception, and would be a great work but for
a roughness which is more careless than archaic. PAOLO ANIMUCCIA, a
brother of Giovanni, was also celebrated as a composer; he is said by
Fetis to have been maestro di capella at S. Giovanni in Laterano
from the middle of January 1550 until 1552, and to have died in 1563. |








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