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{{short description|Italian composer}}
'''Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger''' (also: ''Johann(es) Hieronymus Kapsberger'' or ''Giovanni Geronimo Kapsperger''; c. 1580 – 17 January 1651) was a [[Germany|German]]-[[Italy|Italian]] [[virtuoso]] performer and composer of the early [[Baroque]] period. A prolific and highly original composer, Kapsberger is chiefly remembered today for his [[lute]] and [[theorbo]] (''chitarrone'') music, which was seminal in the development of these as solo instruments.

'''Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger''' (also: ''Johann(es) Hieronymus Kapsberger'' or ''Giovanni Geronimo Kapsperger''; c. 1580 – [[Rome]] 17 January 1651) was an [[Austria]]n-[[Italy|Italian]] [[virtuoso]] performer and composer of the early [[Baroque]] period. A prolific and highly original composer, Kapsberger is chiefly remembered today for his [[lute]] and [[theorbo]] (''chitarrone'') music, which was seminal in the development of these as solo instruments.

[[File:Extrait toccata kapsberger.png|thumb|upright=1.8|First measures of the tablature of the first ''tocatta of the libro primo d'intavolatura di chitarone'' (first book of chitarone tablature) by Johannes Hieronymus Kapsberger published in Venice in 1604. The monograph ''HK'' stands for Hieronymus Kapsberger.]]

His nickname was "the German of the theorbo", deriving from his fame as a virtuoso of the theorbo and of the other instruments belonging to the lute family.


==Life==
==Life==
Nothing is known about Kapsberger's date and place of birth. His father Colonel Wilhelm (Guglielmo) von Kapsperger was a military official of the Imperial House of Austria, and may have settled in [[Venice]], the city which may have been Kapsberger's birthplace. After 1605 Kapsberger moved to [[Rome]], where he quickly attained a reputation as a brilliant virtuoso. He cultivated connections with various powerful individuals and organizations; and himself organized "academies" in his house, which were counted among the "wonders of Rome". Around 1609 Kapsberger married Gerolima di Rossi, with whom he had at least three children. He started publishing his music at around the same time, with more than a dozen collections of music appearing during the next ten years. These included the celebrated ''Libro I d'intavolatura di lauto'' (1611), Kapsberger's only surviving collection of music for lute.<ref name="grove">Coelho, Grove.</ref>
Nothing is known about Kapsberger's date and place of birth. His father Colonel Wilhelm (Guglielmo) von Kapsperger was a military official of the Imperial House of Austria, and may have settled in [[Venice]], the city which may have been Kapsberger's birthplace.
After 1605 Kapsberger moved to [[Rome]], where he quickly attained a reputation as a brilliant virtuoso. He cultivated connections with various powerful individuals and organizations and organized "academies" in his house, which were counted among the "wonders of Rome". Around 1609 Kapsberger married Gerolima di Rossi, with whom he had at least three children. He started publishing his music at around the same time, with more than a dozen collections of music appearing during the next ten years. These included the celebrated ''Libro I d'intavolatura di lauto'' (1611), Kapsberger's only surviving collection of music for lute.<ref name="grove">Coelho, Grove.</ref>


In 1624 Kapsperger entered the service of Cardinal [[Francesco Barberini (seniore)|Francesco Barberini]], where he worked with numerous important composers (such as [[Girolamo Frescobaldi]] and [[Stefano Landi]]) and poets (which included Giulio Rospigliosi, the future [[Pope Clement IX]]). Kapsberger worked in Francesco's household until 1646. He died in 1651.<ref name="grove" />
In 1624 Kapsberger entered the service of Cardinal [[Francesco Barberini (seniore)|Francesco Barberini]], where he worked with numerous important composers, such as [[Girolamo Frescobaldi]] and [[Stefano Landi]], and poets which included Giulio Rospigliosi, the future [[Pope Clement IX]]. Kapsberger worked in Barberini's household until 1646. He died in 1651.<ref name="grove" />


==Works==
==Works==
Line 11: Line 19:
Kapsberger is best remembered as a composer for [[lute]] and [[theorbo]]. At least six collections were published during his lifetime, two of which are currently lost. Kapsberger's writing is characterized, especially in [[toccata]]s, by spontaneous changes, sharp contrasts, unusual rhythmic groupings and, sometimes, passages that do not conform to the rules of [[counterpoint]] that were in use at the time.<ref name="grove" /> The vast majority of contemporary critics praised Kapsberger's compositional skill and innovations. Among them was [[Athanasius Kircher]], who described Kapsberger as a "superb genius" and attested that he has "successfully penetrated the secrets of music."<ref>Cited in: Paul O'Dette, liner notes to "Baroque Lute Music. Volume 1: Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger", 1990/2001. Harmonia Mundi HMG507020</ref> One notable exception was the critic [[Giovanni Battista Doni]], who was initially supportive of the composer, but then turned against him for unclear reasons and criticised his music in print.<ref name="Coelho, liner notes, p. 13">Coelho, liner notes, p.&nbsp;13.</ref>
Kapsberger is best remembered as a composer for [[lute]] and [[theorbo]]. At least six collections were published during his lifetime, two of which are currently lost. Kapsberger's writing is characterized, especially in [[toccata]]s, by spontaneous changes, sharp contrasts, unusual rhythmic groupings and, sometimes, passages that do not conform to the rules of [[counterpoint]] that were in use at the time.<ref name="grove" /> The vast majority of contemporary critics praised Kapsberger's compositional skill and innovations. Among them was [[Athanasius Kircher]], who described Kapsberger as a "superb genius" and attested that he has "successfully penetrated the secrets of music."<ref>Cited in: Paul O'Dette, liner notes to "Baroque Lute Music. Volume 1: Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger", 1990/2001. Harmonia Mundi HMG507020</ref> One notable exception was the critic [[Giovanni Battista Doni]], who was initially supportive of the composer, but then turned against him for unclear reasons and criticised his music in print.<ref name="Coelho, liner notes, p. 13">Coelho, liner notes, p.&nbsp;13.</ref>


Some contemporaries, such as [[Stefano Landi]], mentioned that Kapsberger was not as meticulous a composer as he was as a performer.<ref name="Coelho, liner notes, p. 13"/> The features listed above led some modern scholars to share this view and they tend to believe that Kapsberger was a composer of inferior ability. Prominent among these critics is lutenist [[Rolf Lislevand]]: in his words, "Kapsberger was as bad a composer as he was a fine instrumentalist [...] The ideas are often badly developed, and are freely associated with one another; no real musical discourse is built up [...] the rhythm&mdash;even after serious efforts at fathoming it&mdash;wavers between inspired cleverness and total confusion."<ref>Rolf Lislevand, liner notes to "Johann Hieronimus Kapsberger: Libro Quarto d'Intavolatura di Chitarone", 1993. Auvidis/Astrée AS 128515</ref>
Some contemporaries, such as [[Stefano Landi]], mentioned that Kapsberger was not as meticulous a composer as he was as a performer.<ref name="Coelho, liner notes, p. 13"/> The features listed above led some modern scholars to share this view and they tend to believe that Kapsberger was a composer of inferior ability. Prominent among these critics is lutenist [[Rolf Lislevand]]: in his words, "Kapsberger was as bad a composer as he was a fine instrumentalist [...] The ideas are often badly developed, and are freely associated with one another; no real musical discourse is built up [...] the rhythm—even after serious efforts at fathoming it—wavers between inspired cleverness and total confusion."<ref>Rolf Lislevand, liner notes to "Johann Hieronimus Kapsberger: Libro Quarto d'Intavolatura di Chitarone", 1993. Auvidis/Astrée AS 128515</ref>


Regardless of how one regards his compositional prowess, Kapsberger was one of the principal composers of lute and theorbo music during the early Baroque era (together with [[Alessandro Piccinini]]) and greatly contributed towards advancing European plucked string instruments of the time.<ref name="grove" /> Also, Kapsberger's toccatas may have influenced those of [[Girolamo Frescobaldi]],<ref>Robert Judd. Preface to ''Johann Hieronymus Kapsberger: Libro primo de balli, gagliarde et correnti, a quattro voci (Rome, 1615) and Libro primo di sinfonie a quattro (Rome, 1615)'', p.&nbsp;xi. Italian Instrumental Music of the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries, vol. 25. New York and London: Garland, 1993. See also: Victor Anand Coelho, ''Frescobaldi and the Lute and Chittarone Toccatas of "Il Tedesco della Tiorba"'', in Alexander Silbiger (ed.), ''Frescobaldi Studies'', p.&nbsp;137&ndash;56. Durham: Duke University Press, 1987.</ref> much like French lute music would, some years later, influence [[Johann Jakob Froberger]]'s [[suite (music)|suite]]s.
Regardless of how one regards his compositional prowess, Kapsberger was one of the principal composers of lute and theorbo music during the early Baroque era (together with [[Alessandro Piccinini]]) and greatly contributed towards advancing European plucked string instruments of the time.<ref name="grove" /> Also, Kapsberger's toccatas may have influenced those of [[Girolamo Frescobaldi]],<ref>Robert Judd. Preface to ''Johann Hieronymus Kapsberger: Libro primo de balli, gagliarde et correnti, a quattro voci (Rome, 1615) and Libro primo di sinfonie a quattro (Rome, 1615)'', p.&nbsp;xi. Italian Instrumental Music of the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries, vol. 25. New York and London: Garland, 1993. See also: Victor Anand Coelho, ''Frescobaldi and the Lute and Chittarone Toccatas of "Il Tedesco della Tiorba"'', in Alexander Silbiger (ed.), ''Frescobaldi Studies'', p.&nbsp;137–56. Durham: Duke University Press, 1987.</ref> much like French lute music would, some years later, influence [[Johann Jakob Froberger]]'s [[suite (music)|suite]]s.


Kapsberger's other music includes two collections of instrumental ensemble dances, rare for the period, and a wealth of vocal music, which was widely performed during his lifetime, but which is now critically less acclaimed. Kapsberger also wrote stage music, almost all currently lost. The only surviving work of this kind is ''Apotheosis sive Consecratio SS Ignatii et Francisci Xaverii'' (1622).<ref name="grove" />
Kapsberger's other music includes two collections of instrumental ensemble dances, rare for the period, and a wealth of vocal music, which was widely performed during his lifetime, but which is now critically less acclaimed. Kapsberger also wrote stage music, almost all currently lost. The only surviving work of this kind is ''Apotheosis sive Consecratio SS Ignatii et Francisci Xaverii'' (1622).<ref name="grove" />


==List of works==
==List of works==
This list only includes works published during the composer's lifetime; the few pieces that survive in manuscripts, as well as pieces of questionable attribution, are not included.
This list only includes works published during the composer's lifetime. The few pieces that survive in manuscripts, as well as pieces of questionable attribution, are not included.


===Lute and theorbo===
===Lute and theorbo===
Line 32: Line 40:
===Sacred vocal===
===Sacred vocal===
* ''Libro primo di mottetti passeggiati'' (1612), 20 [[motet]]s for voice and basso continuo
* ''Libro primo di mottetti passeggiati'' (1612), 20 [[motet]]s for voice and basso continuo
* ''Cantiones sacrae'' (1628), 21 pieces for 3&ndash;6 voices and basso continuo
* ''Cantiones sacrae'' (1628), 21 pieces for 3–6 voices and basso continuo
* ''Modulatus sacri diminutis voculis concinnati'' (1630), for voice and basso continuo
* ''Modulatus sacri diminutis voculis concinnati'' (1630), for voice and basso continuo
* ''I pastori di Bettelemme'' (1630), for six voices and basso continuo
* ''I pastori di Bettelemme'' (1630), for six voices and basso continuo
Line 41: Line 49:


====Villanellas====
====Villanellas====
* ''Libro primo di villanelle'' (1610), 20 [[villanella]]s for 1&ndash;3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro primo di villanelle'' (1610), 20 [[villanella]]s for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro secundo di villanelle'' (1619), 21 villanellas for 1&ndash;3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro secundo di villanelle'' (1619), 21 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro terzo di villanelle'' (1619), 20 villanellas for 1&ndash;3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro terzo di villanelle'' (1619), 20 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro quarto di villanelle'' (1623), 23 villanellas for 1&ndash;3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro quarto di villanelle'' (1623), 23 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro quinto di villanelle'' (1630), villanellas for 1&ndash;4 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro quinto di villanelle'' (1630), villanellas for 1–4 voices and basso continuo
* ''Li fiori &ndash; Libro sesto di villanelle'' (1632), villanellas for 1&ndash;4 voices and basso continuo
* ''Li fiori Libro sesto di villanelle'' (1632), villanellas for 1–4 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro settimo di villanelle'' (1640), villanellas for 1&ndash;3 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro settimo di villanelle'' (1640), villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo


====Arie passeggiate====
====Arie passeggiate====
* ''Libro primo di arie passeggiate'' (1612), 22 arias for voice and theorbo basso continuo
* ''Libro primo di arie passeggiate'' (1612), 22 arias for voice and theorbo basso continuo
* ''Libro secundo di arie passeggiate'' (1623), 30 arias for 1&ndash;2 voices and basso continuo
* ''Libro secundo di arie passeggiate'' (1623), 30 arias for 1–2 voices and basso continuo


====Other works====
====Other works====
Line 76: Line 84:


==References==
==References==
* {{GroveOnline|title=Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger|author=Victor Anand Coelho|access-date=21 July 2006}}
* {{Cite Grove |last=Coelho |first=Victor Anand |title=Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger}}
* Victor Anand Coelho. Liner notes to "Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger: Libro Primo d'Intavolatura di Lauto" (Hopkinson Smith, 10-course lute). Auvidis/Astrée E 8553, 1995.
* Victor Anand Coelho. Liner notes to "Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger: Libro Primo d'Intavolatura di Lauto" (Hopkinson Smith, 10-course lute). Auvidis/Astrée E 8553, 1995.


Line 83: Line 91:
* [http://www.hoasm.org/VC/Kapsberger.html Johannes Hieronymus Kapsberger biography at HOASM]
* [http://www.hoasm.org/VC/Kapsberger.html Johannes Hieronymus Kapsberger biography at HOASM]
* [http://luthlibrairie.free.fr/?Renaissance:Italienne Free scores at Luth-Librairie]
* [http://luthlibrairie.free.fr/?Renaissance:Italienne Free scores at Luth-Librairie]
* [http://www.yatesguitar.com/lute/lute.html Richard Yates: Lute Music in Tablature], includes sheet music for 7 toccatas from the recently discovered ''Libro terzo d'intavolatura di chitarrone''
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080406091036/http://www.yatesguitar.com/lute/lute.html Richard Yates: Lute Music in Tablature], includes sheet music for 7 toccatas from the recently discovered ''Libro terzo d'intavolatura di chitarrone''
* {{IMSLP|id=Kapsperger, Giovanni Geronimo}}
* {{IMSLP|id=Kapsperger, Giovanni Geronimo}}
* {{ChoralWiki}}
* {{ChoralWiki}}
Line 92: Line 100:
[[Category:1580s births]]
[[Category:1580s births]]
[[Category:1651 deaths]]
[[Category:1651 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Venice]]
[[Category:Musicians from Venice]]
[[Category:Italian classical composers]]
[[Category:Italian male classical composers]]
[[Category:Italian male classical composers]]
[[Category:Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Italian Renaissance composers]]
[[Category:Baroque composers]]
[[Category:Italian Baroque composers]]
[[Category:Composers for lute]]
[[Category:Composers for lute]]
[[Category:Lutenists]]
[[Category:Lutenists]]
[[Category:Italian people of German descent]]
[[Category:Italian people of German descent]]
[[Category:17th-century classical composers]]
[[Category:17th-century Italian composers]]
[[Category:17th-century male musicians]]

Latest revision as of 04:48, 9 April 2024

Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger (also: Johann(es) Hieronymus Kapsberger or Giovanni Geronimo Kapsperger; c. 1580 – Rome 17 January 1651) was an Austrian-Italian virtuoso performer and composer of the early Baroque period. A prolific and highly original composer, Kapsberger is chiefly remembered today for his lute and theorbo (chitarrone) music, which was seminal in the development of these as solo instruments.

First measures of the tablature of the first tocatta of the libro primo d'intavolatura di chitarone (first book of chitarone tablature) by Johannes Hieronymus Kapsberger published in Venice in 1604. The monograph HK stands for Hieronymus Kapsberger.

His nickname was "the German of the theorbo", deriving from his fame as a virtuoso of the theorbo and of the other instruments belonging to the lute family.

Life[edit]

Nothing is known about Kapsberger's date and place of birth. His father Colonel Wilhelm (Guglielmo) von Kapsperger was a military official of the Imperial House of Austria, and may have settled in Venice, the city which may have been Kapsberger's birthplace.

After 1605 Kapsberger moved to Rome, where he quickly attained a reputation as a brilliant virtuoso. He cultivated connections with various powerful individuals and organizations and organized "academies" in his house, which were counted among the "wonders of Rome". Around 1609 Kapsberger married Gerolima di Rossi, with whom he had at least three children. He started publishing his music at around the same time, with more than a dozen collections of music appearing during the next ten years. These included the celebrated Libro I d'intavolatura di lauto (1611), Kapsberger's only surviving collection of music for lute.[1]

In 1624 Kapsberger entered the service of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, where he worked with numerous important composers, such as Girolamo Frescobaldi and Stefano Landi, and poets which included Giulio Rospigliosi, the future Pope Clement IX. Kapsberger worked in Barberini's household until 1646. He died in 1651.[1]

Works[edit]

Title page of Kapsberger's Libro primo d'intavolatura di lauto, the only surviving collection of his works for lute, depicting the von Kapsberger coat of arms

Kapsberger is best remembered as a composer for lute and theorbo. At least six collections were published during his lifetime, two of which are currently lost. Kapsberger's writing is characterized, especially in toccatas, by spontaneous changes, sharp contrasts, unusual rhythmic groupings and, sometimes, passages that do not conform to the rules of counterpoint that were in use at the time.[1] The vast majority of contemporary critics praised Kapsberger's compositional skill and innovations. Among them was Athanasius Kircher, who described Kapsberger as a "superb genius" and attested that he has "successfully penetrated the secrets of music."[2] One notable exception was the critic Giovanni Battista Doni, who was initially supportive of the composer, but then turned against him for unclear reasons and criticised his music in print.[3]

Some contemporaries, such as Stefano Landi, mentioned that Kapsberger was not as meticulous a composer as he was as a performer.[3] The features listed above led some modern scholars to share this view and they tend to believe that Kapsberger was a composer of inferior ability. Prominent among these critics is lutenist Rolf Lislevand: in his words, "Kapsberger was as bad a composer as he was a fine instrumentalist [...] The ideas are often badly developed, and are freely associated with one another; no real musical discourse is built up [...] the rhythm—even after serious efforts at fathoming it—wavers between inspired cleverness and total confusion."[4]

Regardless of how one regards his compositional prowess, Kapsberger was one of the principal composers of lute and theorbo music during the early Baroque era (together with Alessandro Piccinini) and greatly contributed towards advancing European plucked string instruments of the time.[1] Also, Kapsberger's toccatas may have influenced those of Girolamo Frescobaldi,[5] much like French lute music would, some years later, influence Johann Jakob Froberger's suites.

Kapsberger's other music includes two collections of instrumental ensemble dances, rare for the period, and a wealth of vocal music, which was widely performed during his lifetime, but which is now critically less acclaimed. Kapsberger also wrote stage music, almost all currently lost. The only surviving work of this kind is Apotheosis sive Consecratio SS Ignatii et Francisci Xaverii (1622).[1]

List of works[edit]

This list only includes works published during the composer's lifetime. The few pieces that survive in manuscripts, as well as pieces of questionable attribution, are not included.

Lute and theorbo[edit]

  • Libro primo d'intavolatura di chitarrone (1604): 6 toccatas, 7 sets of variations, 12 gagliards, Tenore del Kapsberger
  • Libro primo d'intavolatura di lauto (1611): 8 toccatas, 12 gagliards, 12 correntes
  • Libro terzo d'intavolatura di chitarrone (1626), a recently rediscovered collection,[6] now at Yale: 8 toccatas, 1 "gagliarda partita", 2 correntes; then an entire section as practical tutorial for chitarrone players including "passaggi diversi su le note per sonare sopra la parte", cadenzas in tablature, a «tavola per intavolare sopra il Chitarrone, alla Italiana et alla Francese,» a «tavola per sonare il chitarrone sopra il basso».
  • Libro quarto d'intavolatura di chitarrone (1640): 12 toccatas, 16 preludes, 10 passacaglias, 5 chaconnes, and numerous other pieces, including dances, variations, canzonas, etc.

Other instrumental[edit]

  • Libro primo de balli, gagliarde et correnti, a quattro voci (1615): 8 balli, 6 gagliards, 6 correntes
  • Libro primo di sinfonie, a quattro voci (1615): 18 sinfonies à 4 with basso continuo

Sacred vocal[edit]

  • Libro primo di mottetti passeggiati (1612), 20 motets for voice and basso continuo
  • Cantiones sacrae (1628), 21 pieces for 3–6 voices and basso continuo
  • Modulatus sacri diminutis voculis concinnati (1630), for voice and basso continuo
  • I pastori di Bettelemme (1630), for six voices and basso continuo
  • Missae urbanae (1631), three masses for 4, 5 and 8 voices with basso continuo
  • Litaniae deiparae virginis (1631), four litanies for 4, 6 and 8 voices with basso continuo

Secular vocal[edit]

Villanellas[edit]

  • Libro primo di villanelle (1610), 20 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
  • Libro secundo di villanelle (1619), 21 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
  • Libro terzo di villanelle (1619), 20 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
  • Libro quarto di villanelle (1623), 23 villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo
  • Libro quinto di villanelle (1630), villanellas for 1–4 voices and basso continuo
  • Li fiori – Libro sesto di villanelle (1632), villanellas for 1–4 voices and basso continuo
  • Libro settimo di villanelle (1640), villanellas for 1–3 voices and basso continuo

Arie passeggiate[edit]

  • Libro primo di arie passeggiate (1612), 22 arias for voice and theorbo basso continuo
  • Libro secundo di arie passeggiate (1623), 30 arias for 1–2 voices and basso continuo

Other works[edit]

  • Libro primo de madrigali (1609), madrigals for five voices and basso continuo
  • Poematia et carmina [...] liber I (1624), 10 settings of verses by Pope Urban VIII, for voice and basso continuo
  • Coro musicale (1627), wedding songs for voice and basso continuo

Stage[edit]

  • Apotheosis sive Consecratio SS Ignatii et Francisci Xaverii (1622)

Lost[edit]

  • Maggio Cantata nel Real Palazzo de Pitti (1612), secular cantata
  • Libro secundo d'intavolatura di chitarrone (1616)
  • Libro secundo d'intavolatura di lauto (1619)
  • Epitalamio [...] recitativo a piu voci (1628), secular vocal music
  • Libro terzo d'arie passeggiate (1630)
  • Poematia et carmina [...] liber II (1633), settings of verses by Pope Urban VIII
  • La vittoria del principe Vladislao in Valacchia (1625), opera
  • Fetonte (1630), dramma recitato

Also, a compositional treatise by Kapsberger, Il Kapsperger della musica, was announced in 1640 in the preface to Libro quarto d'intavolatura di chitarrone, but is now lost.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Coelho, Grove.
  2. ^ Cited in: Paul O'Dette, liner notes to "Baroque Lute Music. Volume 1: Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger", 1990/2001. Harmonia Mundi HMG507020
  3. ^ a b Coelho, liner notes, p. 13.
  4. ^ Rolf Lislevand, liner notes to "Johann Hieronimus Kapsberger: Libro Quarto d'Intavolatura di Chitarone", 1993. Auvidis/Astrée AS 128515
  5. ^ Robert Judd. Preface to Johann Hieronymus Kapsberger: Libro primo de balli, gagliarde et correnti, a quattro voci (Rome, 1615) and Libro primo di sinfonie a quattro (Rome, 1615), p. xi. Italian Instrumental Music of the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries, vol. 25. New York and London: Garland, 1993. See also: Victor Anand Coelho, Frescobaldi and the Lute and Chittarone Toccatas of "Il Tedesco della Tiorba", in Alexander Silbiger (ed.), Frescobaldi Studies, p. 137–56. Durham: Duke University Press, 1987.
  6. ^ Rivista Italiana di Musicologia. Vol. XXXIX-2 - Abstracts

References[edit]

  • Coelho, Victor Anand (2001). "Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  • Victor Anand Coelho. Liner notes to "Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger: Libro Primo d'Intavolatura di Lauto" (Hopkinson Smith, 10-course lute). Auvidis/Astrée E 8553, 1995.

External links[edit]