You very well may have heard this piece before, as it's quite famous. You probably heard it attributed to the great 18th Century Venetian composer Tomaso Albinoni. That's the hoax. It's not baroque, it's fake neo-baroque written in the 20th Century by Albinoni's biographer Rimo Giazotto.
Giazotto was quite famous in musical circles, a professor at the University of Florence and nominated to the Accademia Nazionale di S. Cecilia, one of the oldest musical institutions in the world. He published this work which he said he discovered on a fragment of a manuscript and transcribed. But it was all made up - Giazotto composed the piece, but since he was an expert on Albinoni's style, he passed it off as real.
The piece has been very popular since its introduction, being used in almost two dozen films and a bunch of television shows (including Monty Python's "Funniest Joke In The World" sketch).
I knew nothing of this before this morning's class. Off to do more research. What a fabulous collection of images as well. One looked like the Allagash in fall.
ReplyDeleteGreat class.
I knew nothing of this before this morning's class. Off to do more research. What a fabulous collection of images as well. One looked like the Allagash in fall.
ReplyDeleteGreat class.
Sorry for the double post. Sitting in front of the fire in East Waterboro, Maine. Coffee is on, great music to listen to, and my pathetic iPhone to connect to the world.
ReplyDeletelibertyman, I thought you might like this one. ;-)
ReplyDeleteFritz Kreisler was another artist who successfully passed off his own work as that of master composers such as Vivaldi.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! Thank you - I needed that.
ReplyDelete