Everything about Anna Guarini totally explained
Anna Guarini, Contessa Trotti, (
1563 –
May 3,
1598) was an
Italian virtuoso singer of the late
Renaissance. She was one of the most renowned singers of the age, and was one of the three
concerto di donne at the
Ferrara court of the
d'Este family, for whom many composers wrote in a progressive style.
Life and murder
She was the daughter of the famous poet
Giovanni Battista Guarini, author of
Il pastor fido. Details of her early years are scanty, but it's known that she began her employment with the court of the d'Este family at the age of seventeen, and immediately attracted attention for the beauty and control of her singing voice. In addition to singing, she was a talented player of the
lute. The Duchess of Ferrara,
Margherita Gonzaga d'Este, apparently kept her and the other two members of the
concerto di donne (
Laura Peverara and
Livia d'Arco) as frequent companions wherever she went; and the three musicians sang so beautifully together that they became famous throughout Italy.
In 1585 she was married to Count
Ercole Trotti. Circumstantial evidence suggests it was an arranged marriage; he was much older than she was, and there's also evidence that the marriage wasn't happy. In 1596 she was accused, evidently without justification, of having an affair with a member of the Duke's armed forces. Although Duke
Alfonso had ordered Trotti not to harm Anna, the Duke died in 1597; and on
May 3,
1598, Trotti surprised Anna in her bedroom while she lay ill with a fever, and aided by an accomplice — her own brother, Girolamo — he murdered her with a hatchet.
Trotti not only was pardoned by the new Duke of
Modena,
Cesare d'Este, but increased in prestige. At any rate, in 1598 the period of musical experimentation at the Ferrara court ended with the takeover of the town by the
Papal States under
Pope Clement VIII.
Influence
The addition of women's voices, and in particular the high
soprano range, was one of the most significant events in the history of singing in the late
16th century. Prior to this time almost all music was written for male voices. Anna Guarini was one of the most influential of the virtuoso singers in the upper soprano range during this transitional period.
The three singers of the
concerto di donne inspired numerous compositions by the leading composers of the court, including
Luzzasco Luzzaschi,
Lodovico Agostini, and others. In addition, their fame was so widespread that composers from elsewhere — such as the nobleman
Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of
Venosa (who also murdered his first wife) — came to Ferrara specifically to write music for them. Anna was famous for her vocal virtuosity and the beauty of her voice, and Agostini dedicated specific
madrigals to her specifically in his third book of madrigals (1582). The vogue for music written for soprano voices was to prove durable; indeed it has never ended.
Monteverdi's first book of madrigals (1587) features soprano voices as the main attraction; in most of the pieces the bass voice only enters after a rest of several bars, allowing the upper voices to begin.
The poet
Torquato Tasso praised her in verse, in his
Mentre in concento alterno, as did Agostini himself in the introduction to his 1582 madrigal collection.
References and further reading
- Articles "Lodovico Agostini," "Este," "Ferrara," "Giovanni Battista Guarini" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2 Note: there's no entry specifically on Anna Guarini in the 1980 edition.
Further Information
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