Lodovico Giustini
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Classical
History
Music
Categories Via RSS |
Music
Music History
Publication Date |
Dec 12, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:02:00
1685 was a good year for composers: Bach, Scarlatti, and Handel were all born in 1685, as was, on today’s date, an Italian composer named Lodovico Giustini. Like Bach, Giustini came from a family of musicians, and Lodovico began his career by succeeding his father as church organist, eventually landing the prize organ post at his hometown cathedral, a position he retained for the rest of his life. Giustini also took up a new-fangled keyboard instrument known as the forte-piano, which, unlike the harpsichord, struck the instrument’s strings with small hammers rather than plucking them like a harp. This new technology allowed music to be played loud and soft (piano and forte), with a more nuanced range of dynamics and phrasing. Giustini’s claim to fame is that in 1732 he published the very first collection of sonatas written specifically for the instrument we now call the piano. Although Giustini’s sonatas attracted little attention when they were first published, since only a few wealthy royals could afford to own these new and very expensive instruments, over the next two centuries thousands of pianos–and piano sonatas–began appearing in even the most modest of musical households.

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