Agostino Agresta
Agostino Agresta was a Neapolitan composer working at the beginning of the 17th century, who can be seen as having been strongly influenced by Carlo Gesualdo. Agresta's only known surviving works are unaccompanied madrigals, including a complete book of six-voice pieces.
Biography
Incredibly little is known about the life and career of Agresta, including neither the circumstances of his birth or death. Apart from his works, there are only two contemporary or near-contemporary references to him.He and his elder brother Giovanni Antonio are listed together in the third book of Scipione Cerreto's 1601 Della prattica musicale as excellent composers operating in Naples ; however, no works by Giovanni Antonio survive. And a 1664 work by the Neapolitan scholar Camillo Tutini lists him as a madrigalist in a section devoted to promoting the cultural claims of Naples against Rome.
''Madrigali a sei voci ... Libro primo'' (1617)
Agresta's only surviving book of madrigals, Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo, was published in Naples in 1617 by Costantino Vitale, and dedicated to Don Roderico di Salazar. Salazar had been commissioner of contraband in the provinces of Terra di Bari and Capitanata but was prosecuted in 1607 for extortion and corruption ; his status in 1617 is unknown.Agresta's relationship to him is similarly unclear, although Larson has speculated that the composer may have been employed by Salazar as a tutor for his children, in a similar capacity to that of his brother in the household of the Count of Roccella.
While composers in the northern Italian peninsula were beginning to move away from what was regarded as the old-fashioned polyphonic madrigal without continuo, Naples remained the most important centre for its composition and publication. In this context, Agresta's Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo occupies an important position, as during the first 30 years of the 17th century only two books of six-part unaccompanied madrigals were published in Naples: Agresta's and Gesualdo's posthumous collection of 1626. While it is impossible to speculate with any accuracy on the basis of such scant evidence, Larson suggests that Agresta's madrigals may reveal something of the style of Gesualdo's incomplete book.
Watkins labels Agresta a minor figure among those Neapolitan composers who were influenced by Gesualdo, but suggests that posterity's opinion of him might well be different if more of his works had survived. Larson goes further and declares that Agresta 'occasionally surpassed in the degree of slow chromatic durezze e ligature and diatonic, scalar points of imitation in quavers and semiquavers', claiming that 'the latter are usually longer and more lively and intricate than Gesualdo's'.
Agresta's other madrigals
Apart from the Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo, three other madrigals identified as being by Agresta survive, all for five voices:- 'Io mi sento morir', in Giovanni Vincenzo Macedonio di Mutio's Il secondo libro de madrigali a cinque voci, published in Naples in 1606 by Giovanni Giacomo Carlino. An incomplete and damaged set of part-books exists in the library of the Conservatorio di Musica San Pietro a Majella in Naples.
- 'Caro dolce ben mio', in Giardino novo bellissimo di varii fiori musicali scieltissimi il secondo libro de madrigali a cinque voci raccolti per Melchior Borchgrevinck organista del serenissimo re di Danemarcka, published in Copenhagen in 1606 by Heinrich Waltkirch, which survives complete in the British Library, London, and incomplete in the Landesbibliothek Kassel.
- 'Io ard'e moro, Donna', in Teatro de madrigali a cinque voci. De diversi eccellentiss. musici napolitani, published in Naples in 1609 by Giovanni Battista Gargano and Lucretio Nucci. The only surviving copy of this is in the Landesbibliothek Kassel, with an incomplete Quinto part.
The two volumes of Giardino novo included madrigals by some of the most popular Italian composers of the day, including Claudio Monteverdi, Benedetto Pallavicino and Giaches de Wert, as well as Borchgrevinck and other Danish composers. However, there are a number of works by composers who may not unfairly be deemed minor figures, including Giovanni Paolo Nodari, Curtio Valcampi and Grisostomo Rubiconi, and which Lewis suggests may not previously have been printed.
Apart from 'Caro dolce ben mio', all Agresta's works were published in Naples, and there is no record of him ever having worked or travelled away from Naples, thus seemingly making him very much a southern Italian composer. How then did his works find their way north to Venice, and why was he considered a composer of sufficient stature to be included in a volume of works dedicated, in a politically charged, to King James I of England? While it was not unusual for Neapolitan composers to have their works printed in Venice, the absence of any other evidence that links Agresta to Venice makes it hard to gauge his status and reputation during his lifetime.
There are two other references to Agresta which appear not to have been noted by other authors. In Schofield and Dart's article describing the contents of the British Library manuscript now known as Egerton MS 3665, believed to have been compiled by Francis Tregian, Agresta is listed among the composer represented in the selection of over 700 Italian madrigals included in the manuscript; it is implied in the article, although not clearly, that Agresta's contribution comes from his Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo.
In the mid-1990s Alfred Noe completed a comprehensive study of the contents of the library of Albert Fugger, which was purchased by Mathias Mauchter in 1655 for Emperor Ferdinand III and now forms part of the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek in Vienna.
In the catalogue made by Mauchter at the time of purchase, there is an entry on the last page of the music section which reads 'Il Primo lib.° de Madrigali a 5. di Agostino Agresta'. No collection of five-part madrigals by Agresta survives, nor any reference to one elsewhere. However, Noe identifies this volume as Agresta's 1617 Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo from its contents, regarding the 'a 5' as a copyist's mistake.
The contents of ''Madrigali a sei voci ... Libro primo''
Keith Larson has dealt extensively with the contents of Agresta's Madrigali a sei voci... Libro primo; here are some extra details to his analysis.Numbers 1 to 8 are written in an 'ordinary' clef combination, while numbers 9 to 15 are written in 'high' clefs, suggesting downwards transposition.
If one follows Adriano Banchieri's suggestion in his 1614 Cartella musicale of transposing pieces written in chiavette down by a perfect 4th when the printed key signature contains one flat and by a perfect 5th when it contains no flats, the transposed ranges of the individual voice parts of numbers 9 to 15 all become rather lower than the ranges of numbers 1 to 8. Depending on the singers involved in a performance, a downwards transposition of either a tone or a minor 3rd for numbers 9 to 15 is suggested.
The last piece in the collection, 'Io penso e nel pensar' is unusual in many ways. The anonymous poem is a dense play on the words 'penso', 'pensar' and 'pensier' ; most striking is its use of frequently changing time signatures, which are different in each part, including such proportions as 1:10, 14:6, 6:5 and 3:7. Larson describes it as 'an intellectual challenge to virtuoso singers', while Watkins suggests that its 'novel and highly mannered proportional complexities... while appearing theoretical as well as anachronistic, may well be an attempt by the composer to suggest expressive tempo variability'.
The texts
The choice of poetry comprises both old and new authors, and the majority of the texts are also set by many other composers. These include four by Giambattista Marino, four by Petrarch and two by Giovanni Battista Guarini ; there are four anonymous poems.Numbers 6, 8 and 13 are the only settings of their poems recorded in Il nuovo Vogel, while the text of number 15 is set elsewhere only by Francesco Mazza, in his own first book of six-part madrigals published in Venice in 1590.