Views and reviews of over-looked and under-appreciated culture and creativity
Friday, March 15, 2024
#ClassicsaDay #WomensHistoryMonth Week 2, 2024
The #ClassicsaDay team has made Women's History Month the March theme since 2017. The challenge remains: post classical music videos from female composers on your social media channels. There are plenty of options when it comes to 21st- and 20th-century composers.
What continually surprises me is how much music is yet to be discovered from earlier centuries. And also how much of it was known at the time, but somehow fell into obscurity. Here are my discoveries for the first week of #WomensHistoryMonth.
3/11/24 Caterina Assandra (1590-after 1618): O Dulcis Amor Jesu
Assandra was a Benedictine nun, as well as a composer and organist. She published at least two books of motets (only Op. 2 survives), as well as several other sacred works.
3/12/24 Francesca Caccini (1587–1640?): Chi desia
Francesca's father Giulio was one of the founders of opera. Francesca's sister Settimia was a successful singer and composer. Francesca's "La liberazione di Ruggerio" (1625) is the earliest known opera composed by a woman.
3/13/24 Settimia Caccini (1591–1638?): Due luci ridenti
Settima's father Giulio was one of the founders of opera. And her sister Francesca was a respected composer of opera as well. Although a prolific composer herself, only eight of Settima's works survive.
3/14/24 Claudia Sessa (c. 1570 – c. 1617/19): Occhi io vissi di voi
Sessa was a nun. She was also an instrumentalist, singer, and composer. Two of her sacred choral works were published in 1613.
3/15/24 Lucrezia Orsina Vizzana (1590–1662): O magnum misterium
Vizzana was a nun in the convent of S. Christina, Bologna. And she was also a singer, organist, and composer. A collection of her choral music, Componimenti musicali de motetti concertati a l e più voci was published in 1623.
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