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Music and Musicians

Detail from Bellini's S. Giobbe altarpiece

...if I try another word for music, and I always come back to the only one, Venice. Friederich Nietzsche

The Venetians were famous for being mad for music; even the gondoliers sang as they rowed, songs called barcarole that would inspire the barcarolle of composers over the centuries. As European capital of printing, it's not surprising that in 1501 it was a Venetian, Ottaviano Petrucci, who printed the world's first book of music.

From then on, up through the 18th century, the Republic was at the forefront of the European musical scene, its innovative composers playing a major role in the development of modern opera.

It all happened just as Venice began its long slow decline. The fall of Constantinople and rise of the Ottomans in the eastern Mediterranean, the discovery of the New World and a route around the Cape of Good Hope to the Far East didn't bode well for Venice's long term survival as a trading maritime republic, living in the manner to which it had become accustomed.

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Ca' Vendramin-Calergi

The Casino and Museo Wagner

Francesco Cavalli

17th-century singer, organist and composer

Andrea Gabrieli

Organist of San Marco and leading light of the Venetian School

Giovanni Gabrieli

Maestro of Venetian Renaissance music

Claudio Monteverdi

Early opera composer and musical director at St Mark's

Luigi Nono

Avant garde composer

Palazzetto Bru Zane

One of Venice's oldest and newest concert venues

Palazzo Barbarigo Minotto

Chamber opera in the palace

Palazzo delle Prigioni

Once a jail, now a concert hall

La Pietà

Vivaldi's church and museum

Lorenzo da Ponte

Priest, womanizer, professor—and Mozart's librettist

San Basso

Today a concert hall

San Vidal (Vitale)

Carpaccio and Vivaldi concerts

Scuola Grande San Teodoro

Now used for Vivialdi concerts

St George

Venice's Anglican church

Barbara Strozzi

Baroque composer, singer and musician

Teatro La Fenice

The Phoenix of Operas

Antonio Vivaldi

The high priest of Baroque music

Adrian Willaert

Renaissance composer and founder of the Venetian School

Text © Dana Facaros & Michael Pauls

Image by PD Art