Maddalena Casulana

Maddalena Casulana (c. 1544 c. 1590) was an Italian composer, lutenist and singer of the late Renaissance. She is the first female composer to have a whole book of her music printed and published in the history of western music.[1][2]

Artemisia Gentileschi, St Cecilia Playing a Lute, circa 1610-1612, Spada Gallery, Rome.

Life and work

Extremely little is known about her life, other than what can be inferred from the dedications and writings on her collections of madrigals. Most likely she was born at Casole d'Elsa, near Siena, from the evidence of her name. She received her musical education and early experiences in Florence.[3]

Her first work dates from 1566: four madrigals in a collection, Il Desiderio, which she produced in Florence. Two years later she published in Venice her first actual book of madrigals for four voices, Il primo libro di madrigali, which is the first printed, published work by a woman in western music history. Also that year Orlando di Lasso conducted Nil mage iucundum at the court of Albert V, Duke of Bavaria in Munich; however the music has not survived.

She evidently was close to Isabella de' Medici, and dedicated some of her music to her. In 1570, 1583 and 1586 she published other books of madrigals, all at Venice. Sometime during this period she married a man named Mezari, but no other information is known about him, or where she (or they) were living. Evidently she visited Verona, Milan and Florence, based on information contained in dedications, and likely she went to Venice as well, since her music was published there and numerous Venetians commented on her abilities. She made at least one voyage to the French imperial court in the 1570s.[4]

The following line in the dedication to her first book of madrigals, to Isabella de' Medici, shows her feeling about being a female composer at a time when such a thing was rare: "[I] want to show the world, as much as I can in this profession of music, the vain error of men that they alone possess the gifts of intellect and artistry, and that such gifts are never given to women."

Style

Her style is moderately contrapuntal and chromatic, reminiscent of some of the early work by Marenzio as well as many madrigals by Philippe de Monte, but avoids the extreme experimentation of the Ferrara school composers such as Luzzaschi and Gesualdo. Her melodic lines are singable and carefully attentive to the text. Casulana favoured dramatic dialogue in her polyphonic vocal works. This is demonstrated in her madrigal, "Morte - Che vôi - Te Chiamo?", in which she alternates different voices to highlight the questions and answers of the text.[3]

Other composers of the time, such as Philippe de Monte, thought highly of her; that Lassus conducted a work of hers at a wedding in Bavaria suggests that he also was impressed with her ability. A total of 66 madrigals by Casulana have survived.

Discography

  • Bonds, Mark Evan. A History of Music in Western Culture. Vol. 1. Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2014, 6 compact discs accompany text of same title. Originally released in 2010.
  • Briscoe, James R., comp. New Historical Anthology of Music by Women.. Indiana University Press, 2004, 3 compact discs accompanying an anthology of scores. Originally released in 1991.
  • I canti di Euterpe, sec. XVI. Ensemble Laus contentus.Recorded in 1998. La bottega discantica, Discantica 37, 1998, compact disc.
  • English and Italian Renaissance Madrigals. Virgin 7243 5 61671 2 4, 1999, 2 compact discs. Originally released in 1987.
  • Frauensaiten: die weibliche Seite der Musik. The Hilliard Ensemble, et al. EMI Electrola 7243 4 78380 2 6, 1997, compact disc. Originally released as LP in 1955.
  • Full Well She Sang: Women’s Music from the Middle Ages & Renaissance. Marquis MAR 81445, 2013, compact disc. Originally released in 1991.
  • Italian Renaissance Madrigals. EMI Classics CDC 7 54435 2, 1992, compact disc.
  • Understanding Music: Student’s Compact Disc Collection. Sony Music Special Products A3 24952, 1996, 3 compact discs accompany textbook of same title.
  • Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel. Capella Augusta Guelferbytana, Mädchenchor Hannover (Gudrun Schröfel, cond.) ; Knabenchor Hannover (Jörg Breiding, cond.). Recorded July 4–9, 2011. Rondeau ROP6054, 2011, compact disc.

Work Index

This index provides a list of Casulana's works and a reference from the original publication. Available recordings are provided in the third column.

work titleoriginal publicationavailable on CD
Adio Lidia mia bellaMadrigals, bk. 2, [no. 8]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Ahi possanza d'amorMadrigals, bk. 2, [no. 4]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Amor per qual cagionMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 2]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Amor per qual cagionMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 2]Full Well She Sang: Women's Music from the Middle Ages & Renaissance.
Amorosetto fioreThird Book of Desire: 4-Part Madrigals by Lasso... [no. 7]not yet recorded
Ben venga il pastor mioMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 7]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Cinta di fior un giornoMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 9]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Come fra verd' erbetteMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 17]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Dea che nel mar nacque, LaMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 11]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Gli ochi lucent' e belliMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 10]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Gran miracol d'amoreMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 20]Rarities from the Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Io d'odorate frondeMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 3]Full Well She Sang: Women's Music from the Middle Ages & Renaissance.
Io d'odorate frondeMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 3]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Io felice pastoreMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 12]Full Well She Sang: Women's Music from the Middle Ages & Renaissance.
Monti selve fontaneMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 14]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Morir non può il mio cuoreMadrigals, bk. 1I canti di Euterpe, 16th c.
Morir non può il mio cuoreMadrigals, bk. 1English and Italian Renaissance Madrigals
Morir non può il mio cuoreMadrigals, bk. 1Frauensaiten: Die weibliche Seite der Musik
Morir non può il mio coureMadrigals, bk. 1A History of Music in Western Culture
Morir non può il mio coureMadrigals, bk. 1Italian Renaissance Madrigals
Morir non può il mio coureMadrigals, bk. 1Understanding Music: Student's Compact Disc Collection
Morte--Che vôi--Te chiamoMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 6]New Historical Anthology of Music by Women
Morte--Che vôi--Te chiamoMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 6]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
O notte o ciel o marMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 5]I canti di Euterpe, 16th c.
O notte o ciel o marMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 5]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Per lei pos' in oblioMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 13]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Ridon or per le piaggieMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 1]Full Well She Sang: Women's Music from the Middle Ages & Renaissance.
Ridon or per le piaggieMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 1]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
S'alcun vi mira fisoMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 16]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Sculpio ne l'am' AmoreMadrigals, bk. 1not yet recorded
Se sciôr si ved'il laccio a cui dianz'ioMadrigals, bk. 1not yet recorded
Stavasi il mio bel SolIl Gaudio (1586)Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
Tra verdi frondiMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 21]not yet recorded
Vagh'amorosi augelliMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 15]I canti di Euterpe, 16th c.
Vedesti Amor giamaiMadrigals, bk. 1not yet recorded
Vivo ardor viva fiammaVivo ardor viva fiammaVerklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
vostro dipartir, IlMadrigals, bk. 2 [no. 19]Verklingend und ewig: Raritäten aus der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
gollark: I mean, it loses the whole "scarcity" thing of actual eggs, but hey, it looks cool.
gollark: The new versions even come with a sort of partial reimplementation of the rightclick-and-it-teleports feature (it disappears on rightclick).
gollark: 2KST.
gollark: Just buy a SynthetiEgg.
gollark: I'll print it for you, I guess.

References

  1. Thomas W. Bridges. "Casulana, Maddalena." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/05155 (accessed January 10, 2010).
  2. Alternative names: Madalena Casulana di Mezarii, Madalena Casula.
  3. James R. Briscoe (July 2004). New Historical Anthology of Music by Women, Volume 1. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21683-0.
  4. Jeanice Brooks (January 2000). Courtly Song in Late Sixteenth-Century France. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-07587-7.

An anonymous early 17th-century portrait has become identified with Maddelena Casulana since 2010. However, there is no evidence that it is actually a portrait of Casulana.

Bibliography

  • Bridges, Thomas W. “Maddalena Casulana". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Edited by Stanley Sadie. Washington, D. C.: Grove's Dictionaries of Music, 1980.
  • Bridges, Thomas W. “Madelana Casulana” in The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers. Edited by Julie Anne Sadie and Rhian Samuel. New York: W. W. Norton, 1995.
  • Chater, James. “’Such sweet sorrow’: The Dialogo di partenza in the Italian Madrigal.” Early Music 27, no. 4 (November 1999): 576-88, 590-99.
  • Gough, Melinda J.”Marie de Medici’s 1605 ballet de la reine and the Virtuosic Female Voice.” Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal 7 (2012): 127-56.
  • Hadden, Nancy. “Changing Women: Performers, Patrons and Composers in Renaissance Europe.” IAWM Journal 18, no. 1 (June 2012):14-20.
  • Heere-Beyer, Samantha E. “Claiming Voice: Madalena Casulana and the Sixteenth-Century Italian Madrigal.” MM thesis, University of Pittsburgh, 2009.
  • LaMay, Thomasin. “Composing from the Throat: Madalena Casulana's Primo libro de madrigali, 1568.” In Musical Voices of Early Modern Women: Many-Headed Melodies. Edited by Thomasin LaMay. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2005.
  • LaMay, Thomasin. “Madalena Casulana: My Body Knows Unheard of Songs.” In Gender, Sexuality, and Early Music. Edited by Todd C. Borgerding. New York: Routledge, 2002, 41-72.
  • Lindell, Robert. “Music and Patronage at the Court of Rudolf II.” In Music in the German Renaissance: Sources, Styles, and Contexts. Edited by John Kmetz. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  • MacAuslan, Janna and Kristan Aspen. “Noteworthy Women: Renaissance Women in Music.” Hot Wire (1993): 12-13. EBSCOhost (accessed October 18, 2016).
  • Newcomb, Anthony. “Giovanni Maria Nanino’s Early Patrons in Rome.” The Journal of Musicology 30, no. 1 (2013): 103-27.
  • Pendle, Karin. “Musical Women in Early Modern Europe.” Women & Music: a History, Indiana University Press, 2001.
  • Pescerelli, Beatrice, ed. I madrigali di Maddalena Casulana. Florence: L.S. Olschki, 1979.
  • Pescerelli, Beatrice. "Maddalena Casulana". In The Historical Anthology of Music by Women. Edited by James R. Briscoe. Bloomington: Indiana U P, 1986.
  • Willimann, Joseph. “Indi non piùdes io”: Vom Verzichten und Begehren: Die Madrigale von Maddalena Casulana.” Musik & Ästhetik 10, no. 37 (2006): 71-97.
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