Luca Bati

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Luca Bati (c. 1546 – 17 October 1608) was an Italian Baroque composer and music teacher. One of his pupils was Marco da Gagliano.

Bati was born and died in Florence. He was maestro di cappella of Pisa Cathedral (1596) and then of the Medici Court and Florence Cathedral (from 1598-1599). His dramatic music for Medici weddings and Florentine carnivals is lost but his surviving madrigals (1594, 1598) and sacred works are of high quality though not notably progressive.

Works[]

  • II primo libro de Madrigali 5 voci (contains 23 madrigals by Bati and one each by and ), Venice, 1594
  • II secondo libro de Madrigali 5 voci (contains 21 madrigals by Bati and one by Piero Strozzi), Venice, 1598
  • Music for the intermedio to 's Rappresentazione sacra Esaltazione della Croce, Florence, 1589
  • Music for 's Mascherata Le fiamme d'amore, Florence, 1595
  • Third and fourth chorus to Il Rapimento di Cefalo (text by Gabriello Chiabrera, music mostly by Giulio Caccini with contributions by Stefano Venturi del Nibbio and Piero Strozzi), Florence, 1600

Further reading[]

  • D. S. Burchart. "Luca Bati and the Late Cinquecento Madrigal in Florence." In Musicologia humana: studies in honor of Warren and Ursula Kirkendale, edited by S. Gmeinwieser, D. Hiley, and J. Riedlbauer, 251-273. Florence: Olschki, 1994. ISBN 88-222-4234-3
  • F. D'Accone. "The Sources of Luca Bati's Sacred Music at the Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore." In Essays on Italian Music in the Cinquecento, edited by R. Charteris, 159-177. Sydney, 1990. ISBN 0-949269-99-9
  • P. Gargiulo. Luca Bati, madrigalista fiorentino. Florence: Olschki, 1991. ISBN 88-222-3859-1
  • F. Ghisi. "Luca Bati Maestro della Cappella Granducale di Firenze." 8 (1954): 106-108.

External links[]


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