Composers

Orazio Vecchi

Voice
Tenor
Bass
Soprano
Alto
Mixed chorus
Lute
Men's chorus
String ensemble
Madrigal
Canzonetta
Arias
Motet
Secular choruses
Choruses
Religious music
Saltarello
Piece
Capriccio
by popularity

A

Accingeteui AmantiAhi tormentosi abissiAhi, se si grida al focoAl bel de tuoi capelliAmor opra che puoi

B

Beati omnes qui timent Dominum

C

Cantate laudem DeoCantemus laetis vultibusCanzonette a quattro voci, Libro 3Canzonette a quattro voci, Libro QuartoCanzonette a quattro voci, Theodor GerlachCanzonette a tre vociCanzonette d'AmoreCaro dolce mio beneChe fai DoriCicirlandaClorindaCoppia realCorse alla morte

D

Damon e FilliDe la mia cruda sorteDeh prega Amor il FatoDeh vita allabastrinaDiuersi linguaggi à 9Doe not tremble but stand fast

E

E tra verdi arbuscelliEcco su'l TauroErat Jesus ejiciens daemonium

F

Fa una canzonaFantasia à 4Fummo felici un tempo

G

Gioite tuttiGitene Ninfe

I

Ie veu le Cerf du bois salirIl bianco e dolce cignoImitazione del venezianoIo son feniceIo sper' e tem' et ard'Io speroIte rime dolent'al duro sasso

L

L'AmfiparnasoLe Veglie di Siena, overo i Varii Humori della Musica

M

Madrigali a 5 voci, Libro 1Margarita dai CoraiMisericordias DominiMissa In Resurrectione DominiMo magari colonaMostrau'in ciel

N

Non vuò pregare

O

O che vezzosa auroraO felici cortesi habitoriO quam suavis est Domino spiritus tuusOcchi ridenti io moroOr ch'ogni vento tace

P

Precipitose rupi

Q

Quem vidistis pastores?

S

Saltarello detto TrivellaSalutis humanae SatorSanita e allegrezzaSe desio di fuggirSe gli è vero HimeneoSe tra verdi arbuscelliSelva di varia ricreationeSo ben mi ch'a bon tempoSoura le lucid' acqueStavasi Aminta

T

Tich toch ò ZanniTra verdi campi a la stagion novellaTremolavan le frondi

U

Udist'al centro mai

V

Vaga NigellaVattene amor in CieloVeni in hortumVillanella
Wikipedia
Orazio Vecchi (6 December 1550 (baptized) in Modena – 19 February 1605) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance. He is most famous for his madrigal comedies, particularly L'Amfiparnaso.
He was born in Modena, and studied with Salvatore Essenga, a Servite monk there. In addition he prepared for holy orders with early education at the Benedictine monastery, and took holy orders sometime before 1577.
By the end of the 1570s he was well-connected with the composers of the Venetian school (for example Claudio Merulo and Giovanni Gabrieli) since he collaborated with them in writing a sestina for a ducal marriage. During this period he accompanied Count Baldassare Rangoni on his travels, going to Bergamo and Brescia.
He was maestro di cappella (director of music) at the Salò cathedral between 1581 and 1584. Following this, he was the choirmaster at the cathedral of Reggio Emilia, until 1586. In that year he moved to Correggio where he was appointed canon of the cathedral there; he composed copiously during his time there, though he felt isolated from the major musical centers of Italy such as Rome, Venice, Florence and Ferrara. Eventually he attempted to correct this by moving back to Modena, where he attained the rank of mansionario (a priest who also had charge of the choir). He seems to have had considerable financial difficulties during this time, which he alluded to in his letters, and occasionally in his compositions.
In 1594 his madrigal comedy, L'Amfiparnaso, premiered in Modena and was published in 1597 in a lavishly illustrated edition. That same year he visited Venice, where he published a collection of canzonette. In addition he published a huge amount of other music that same year, evidently his complete production of the last 16 years in Correggio and the other towns. One of the pieces he published was L'Amfiparnaso, which is his best-known composition.
Duke Cesare d'Este hired Vecchi in 1598 to be his maestro di corte, i.e. the master of music at his court, and Vecchi accompanied him to Rome and Florence in 1600; while in Florence he heard Jacopo Peri's opera Euridice. Afterwards he returned to Modena where he continued to serve in the cathedral until his death in 1605.
Vecchi was renowned for his madrigals, especially his grouping of them together in a new form called the "madrigal comedy." This was a light, popular, and dramatic entertainment form of the late 16th century, sometimes regarded as one of the precursors to opera.
In addition, Vecchi published books of canzonette, a lighter alternative to the madrigal, midway in complexity and seriousness between it and the villanella. He also composed serious madrigals, though not in the quantity of composers like Marenzio, as well as some sacred music. The sacred music in particular shows the influence of the Venetian school, with polychoral writing as well as contrasting duple- versus triple-time sections.