Messa di Rimini
1809
Gioachino Rossini’s operatic works are framed by the composition of church music. In his youth he grew up surrounded by sacred music and through this music gained his first experience as a composer, which included learning how to write for the voice. Musically, he took stock of the wisdom he gained in his later years by composing key works such as Stabat Mater and Petite Messe solennelle. The Missa di Rimini belongs to Rossini’s first creative period and was composed in 1809 for the local cathedral. It is a Kyrie – Gloria Mass in which the Gloria, in accordance with the Italian tradition is extended and divided in ten numbers. The Mass is characterized by the joy of making music and offers both soloists and choir rewarding, if not difficult musical tasks. The compositional demands of the Mass are demonstrated also by the presence of extended instrumental passages in the work.
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Composer
Gioachino Rossini
| 1792-1868Gioachino Antonio Rossini was an Italian composer who is best known today for his operas. Rossini celebrated his first major successes in Venice in 1813 with the opera seria Tancredi and the opera buffa L'italiana in Algeri. The following years continued this success story. From 1830 onwards, Rossini largely withdrew from public life. Although he still composed many works, including the Stabat mater, he devoted most of his time to eating and enjoying life. During his lifetime, Rossini enjoyed enormous fame throughout Europe, but also, thanks to his apparently humorous and affectionate character, popularity among many of his colleagues. Personal details