songs Bestlove ... best love songs Domenico Scarlatti ... song best love composer ... best love classical author ... bestlove popular songs ... song best love writer ... best love song title ... song best love pop music ... song best love Domenico Scarlatti biography ... best song love classical compossers ... best love find songs ... look best love songs ... songs best love wanted ... get songs best love ... wedding best love song ... anniversary best love songs ... I love you best love songs ... get well songs best love ... Swing dance best love songs ... best love golden oldies songs ... best love classic rock songs ... new age best love songs ... best love dico songs ... great best love songs ... best love songs of time ... best performor love songs ... best love great song singer ... best love song Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky ... Claude Debussy best love songs ... Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart songs best love ... best love John Philip Sousa songs ... best love Party songs ... Birthday best love songs ... best love songs I love you ... get well best love sons ... best love songs say thank you ... wedding songs ... I love you best love songs ... get well songs ... thank you best love songs ... Great best love songs all occacsions ... find best love song ... look best love songs ... need best love song ... want best love song ... get best love song
Author , Composer , Writer , Performer :
Domenico Scarlatti


Song Best Love Rating:
Song Title: Sonata in B-flat, L500
Song Composition Date: 18th century
Song Artist: Domenico Scarlatti
Song Performer: Domenico Scarlatti
Song Show: Classical
Authors Description: (born Naples, 26 October 1685; died Madrid, 23 July 1757). Son of Alessandro Scarlatti. In 1701 he was appointed organist and composer of the vice-regal court at Naples, where his father was maestro di cappella. The following year he took leave of absence and travelled with the family to Florence where Alessandro hoped for employment from Pnnce Ferdinando de' Medici. When this was not forthcoming Domenico returned to Naples, where he tried his hand at opera before his father removed him in 1705 and sent him to Venice to try his luck there. It may have been in Venice that he first met Handel, with whom he formed a strong attachment. (Another friendship made in Italy was with Thomas Roseingrave, who later championed Scarlatti's music in England and Ireland.) By 1707, however, Scarlatti was in Rome, assisting his father at San Maria Maggiore, and he remained in Rome for over 12 years, occupying posts as maestro to the dowager Queen of Poland from 1711, to the Marquis de Fontes from 1714, and at St. Peter's (assistant maestro of the Cappella Giulia from November 1713, maestro from December 1714). He thus provided music for both sacred and secular employers, but he was unable to free himself from a domineering father until he obtained legal independence in January 1717. In 1719 Scarlatti resigned his positions in Rome and apparently spent some years in Palermo before taking up his next post, as mestre of the Portuguese court in Lisbon. The Lisbon earthquake of 1755 destroyed documents about his career there, but his duties included giving keyboard lessons to John V's daughter, Maria Barbara, and his younger brother, Don Antonio. When Maria Barbara married the Spanish crown prince in 1729 Scarlatti followed her to Seville and then, in 1733, to Madrid, where he spent the rest of his life. Although he continued to write vocal music, sacred and secular, the main works of his Iberian years are the remarkable series of keyboard sonatas, copied out in his last years and taken to Italy by his colleague, the castrato Farinelli. Scarlatti married twice: in 1728 a Roman, Maria Catarina Gentili, and in 1739 a Spaniard, Anastasia Maxarti Ximenes. None of his nine children became a musician. In 1738 he was honoured with a knighthood from King John V of Portugal, to which he responded by dedicating to the king a volume of Essercizi per gravicembalo, the only music published during his lifetime under his supervision. The seven operas Scarlatti wrote in Rome for Queen Maria Casimira were by no means failures, and his church music and secular cantatas contain much admirable music. But his fame rightly rests on the hundreds of keyboard sonatas, nearly all in the same binary form, in which he gave free rein to his imagination, stimulated by the new sounds, sights and customs of Iberia and by the astonishing gifts of his royal pupil and patron. In these he explored new worlds of virtuoso technique, putting to new musical ends such devices as hand-crossing, rapidly repeated notes, wide leaps in both hands and countless other means of achieving a devastating brilliance of effect.

Send Best Love Songs E-Card


More Songs Best Love



Try These Great Original Best Love Sites Below, For your Pleasure

Developed by CulSer