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Adagio

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€ 25,00

Product ID: MZ3 EM197
By Tomaso Albinoni

Publisher:
Muzika
Arranger:
Van de Goot
Series:
Ensemble Music
Line Up:
Flexible Instrumentation
Duration:
5:30
Level: 3

Set & Score


This item is in stock


Instrumentation

1 Score
1 Piano
4 Part 1 in C treble clef
2 Part 1 in Bb treble clef
4 Part 2 in C treble clef
4 Part 2 in Bb treble clef
6 Part 3 in C treble clef
4 Part 3 in Bb treble clef
1 Part 3 in Eb treble clef
1 Part 3 in F treble clef
3 Part 4 in C alto clef
2 Part 4 in Bb low treble clef
1 Part 4 in Bb high treble clef
2 Part 4 in Eb treble clef
2 Part 4 in F treble clef
2 Part 5 in C bass clef
2 Part 5 in Bb bass clef


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Adagio
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Composer
Tomaso Albinoni (1671-1751)

Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni (8 June 1671 – 17 January 1751) was an Italian Baroque composer. Born in Venice, Republic of Venice, to Antonio Albinoni, a wealthy paper merchant in Venice, he studied violin and singing. Relatively little is known about his life, especially considering his contemporary stature as a composer, and the comparatively well-documented period in which he lived.In 1705, he was married; Antonino Biffi, the maestro di cappella of San Marco was a witness, and evidently was a friend of Albinoni's. Albinoni seems to have no other connection with that primary musical establishment in Venice, however, and achieved his early fame as an opera composer at many cities in Italy, including Venice, Genoa, Bologna, Mantua, Udine, Piacenza, and Naples. Unlike most composers of his time, he appears never to have sought a post at either a church or noble court, but then he was a man of independent means and had the option to compose music independently. In 1722, Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria, to whom Albinoni had dedicated a set of twelve concertos, invited him to direct two of his operas in Munich. Around 1740, a collection of Albinoni's violin sonatas was published in France as a posthumous work, and scholars long presumed that meant that Albinoni had died by that time. However it appears he lived on in Venice in obscurity; a record from the parish of San Barnaba indicates Tomaso Albinoni died in Venice in 1751, of diabetes.
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