Composers

Robert Valentine

Recorder
Flute
Violin
Oboe
Harpsichord
Mandolin
String ensemble
Sonata
Dance
Suite
Airs
Balletti
Gavotte
Concerto
by popularity

#

12 Balletti da Camera, Op.412 Recorder Sonatas, Op.212 Recorder Sonatas, Op.312 Sonatas, I-PAp Sanv.D.1456 Flute Sonatas, Op.126 Sonatas for 2 Recorders6 Sonatas for 2 Recorders, Op.66 Sonatas for 2 Recorders, Op.77 Sets of Airs, Op.107 Sets of Airs, Op.9

G

Gavotte

O

Oboe Sonata in G major, YouV 20 No.8

R

Recorder Concerto in B-flat majorRecorder Sonata in A minor, Op.2 No.9Recorder Sonata in A minor, Op.3 No.5Recorder Sonata in A minor, Op.3 No.9Recorder Sonata in C major, Op.3 No.8Recorder Sonata in D minor, Op.3 No.1Recorder Sonata in D minor, Op.3 No.10Recorder Sonata in D minor, Op.3 No.6Recorder Sonata in E minor, Op.2 No.7Recorder Sonata in F major, Op.2 No.12Recorder Sonata in F major, Op.3 No.12Recorder Sonata in F major, Op.3 No.3Recorder Sonata in G major, Op.3 No.2Recorder Sonata in G major, Op.3 No.7

S

Sonates à deux dessus

T

Trio Sonata in D minor
Wikipedia
Robert Valentine (c. 1671 – 26 May 1747), also known as Roberto Valentini and Roberto Valentino, was an English composer, recorder player, oboist and violinist, who moved to Rome and became a naturalised Italian. He is noted for his large number of compositions for the recorder.
Born c. 1671, he was baptized in Leicester on 16 January 1674. He was the son of Thomas Follentine or Follintine, who lived in Leicester from c. 1670 and worked as a town musician there accompanied by his elder sons Thomas and Henry. The family became a prominent one in the musical life of Leicester; descendants included John Valentine, who was the grandson of Robert's eldest brother Thomas, and John Valentine's daughter Ann Valentine.
Robert Valentine seems to have spent little if any of his adult life in England before moving to Italy, where he became known by the Italian versions of his name. He settled in Rome and took a Roman wife, marrying Giulia Bellatti in September 1701 in the parish of Sant'Andrea delle Fratte. They had nine children, although only three of these survived their parents.
He died in the same Roman parish on 26 May 1747, only 12 days after the death of his wife, and not back in England at some other date, as was formerly thought.
Valentine is particularly known for his large output of compositions for the recorder, as well as for his reputation as a highly skilled player of that instrument. He also played the oboe and violin. His compositions were instrumental. They include a number of collections of sonatas and trio sonatas, as well as some examples of concerto grosso. His initial style closely followed that of Arcangelo Corelli, but he gradually progressed towards the Galante style, as evidenced by his later collections of sonatas published in Northern Europe.
His works were popular in the amateur market for flute and recorder music, which flourished in England in the early 18th century, a time when the recorder was also fashionable in concert performance there. Valentine's prominence was recorded by John Hawkins in 1776 in his General History of the Science and Practice of Music:
And to come nearer to our own times, it may be remembered by many now living, that a flute was the pocket companion of many who wished to be thought fine gentlemen. The use of it was to entertain ladies, and such as had a liking for no better music than a song-tune, or such little airs as were then composed for that instrument; and he that could play a solo of Schickhard of Hamburg, or Robert Valentine of Rome, was held a complete master of the instrument.