Francesco Manelli

{{Short description|Italian composer}}

Francesco Manelli (Mannelli) ({{circa}} 1595 – 1667) was a Roman Baroque composer, particularly of opera, and a theorbo player. He is most well known for his collaboration with fellow Roman composer Benedetto Ferrari in bringing commercial opera to Venice. The first two works, in 1637 and 1638, to be put on commercially in the Teatro San Cassiano were both by Manelli – his L'Andromeda and La Maga Fulminata.

Francesco Manelli was for many years confused with the Franciscan friar Giovanni Battista Fasolo, because of the resemblances between Manelli's cantata Luciata (published in Musiche varie, op. 4 Venice, 1636), and Fasolo's dialogue Il carro di Madama Lucia (Rome, 1628), and the shared text of the first piece in both collections. In a comparison of the two cantatas Fasolo's versionRecorded on Il Fasolo, dir. Dumestre Alpha 2004 is "languid and melancholy", while Manelli's versionRecorded on Provenzale et al. Dialoghe. Cappella della Pietà de' Turchini dir. Florio. Symphonia 1995 is "spirited and biting".Piero Mioli A voce sola: studi sulla cantata italiana del XVII secolo, Volume 1 p.332 1988

A mid-14th-century Florentine scholar of the same name, also called dei Pontigiano, was a close friend of Giovanni Boccaccio.[https://books.google.com/books?id=dw1BAQAAMAAJ Dizionario biografico universale], Volume 3, by Felice Scifoni, David Passigli, publisher, Florence (1844); page 890.

Works

Operas, music for all of which is lost.

Cantatas

  • Musiche varie Op. 4 (1636)

Recordings

See also

  • Grove Music Online Article, [http://www.grovemusic.com/shared/views/article.html?from=search&session_search_id=541707412&hitnum=1§ion=music.17616 Manelli (Mannelli), Francesco]
  • The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, [http://www.grovemusic.com/shared/views/article.html?from=search&session_search_id=541707412&hitnum=2§ion=opera.002851 Manelli (Mannelli), Francesco (? ‘Il Fasolo’)]

References