Alessandro Striggio the Younger
Alessandro Striggio the Younger (ca. 1573 – 8 June 1630) was an Italian librettist, the son of the composer Alessandro Striggio. The younger Striggio is most famous for his association with the composer Claudio Monteverdi. He wrote the libretto for Monteverdi's first opera Orfeo (1607), a landmark in the history of the genre, as well as the ballo (sung ballet) Tirsi e Clori. Striggio worked at the court of Mantua and died of the plague while on a diplomatic mission to Venice.
Sources[]
- Timothy Dickey, "Alessandro Striggio (ii)", Allmusic.
Categories:
- 1570s births
- 1630 deaths
- Italian opera librettists
- 17th-century Italian writers
- 17th-century Italian male writers
- 17th-century deaths from plague (disease)
- Infectious disease deaths in Veneto
- Italian male dramatists and playwrights
- Italian writer stubs
- Opera biography stubs