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Giuseppe Torelli
Giuseppe Torelli
Italian violist, violinist, teacher and composer
1
Andrea Zani
Andrea Zani
Italian violinist and composer
2
Carlo Tessarini
Carlo Tessarini
Italian composer
3
Arcangelo Corelli
Arcangelo Corelli
Italian violinist and composer
4
Giovanni Battista Vitali
Giovanni Battista Vitali
Italian composer
5
Giovanni Mossi
Giovanni Mossi
Italian composer
6
Tomaso Albinoni
Tomaso Albinoni
Italian composer
7
Giuseppe Matteo Alberti
Giuseppe Matteo Alberti
Italian Baroque composer and violinist
8
Giovanni Bononcini
Giovanni Bononcini
Italian composer
9
Eugène Ysaÿe
Eugène Ysaÿe
Belgian violinist, composer and conductor
10
Anna Bon
Anna Bon
Italian composer
Biagio Marini
Italian violinist and composer

Biagio Marini

Intro
Italian violinist and composer
Music

Biagio Marini (5 February 1594 – 20 March 1663) was an Italian virtuoso violinist and composer in the first half of the seventeenth century.

Marini was born in Brescia. He may have studied with his uncle Giacinto Bondioli. His works were printed and influential throughout the European musical world. He traveled throughout his life, and occupied posts in Brussels, over thirty years in Neuburg an der Donau and Düsseldorf, and Venice in 1615, joining Monteverdi's group at St. Mark's Cathedral, Padua, Parma, Ferrara, Milan, Bergamo, and Brescia in Italy. There is evidence that he married three times and fathered five children. He died in Venice.

Although he wrote both instrumental and vocal music, he is better known for his innovative instrumental compositions. He contributed to the early development of the string idiom by expanding the performance range of the solo and accompanied violin and incorporating slur, double and even triple stopping, and the first explicitly notated tremolo (in the sonata La Foscarina, op. 1 No. 14; 1617) effects into his music. He was also among the first composers, after Marco Uccellini, to call for scordatura tunings. He made contributions to most of the contemporary genres and investigated unusual compositional procedures, like constructing an entire sonata without a cadence (as in his Sonata senza cadenza). At least some, and perhaps a great deal, of his output is lost, but that which survives exhibits his inventiveness, lyrical skill, harmonic boldness, and growing tendency toward common practice tonality. In addition to his violin works, he wrote music for the cornett, dulcian, and sackbut.

One latter-day champion of Marini's music is the British violinist Andrew Manze, who has released a disc on the Harmonia Mundi label entitled Curiose e moderne inventioni devoted to Marini's music for strings.