Antonio Quintavalle
Antonio Quintavalle was an Italian opera composer.
Biography
He was probably born in Rome, where the beginning of his activity is documented starting from 1688; on 6 February of that year, in fact, his name appears among the members of the Congregation of Musicians of Rome, an association of musicians active in the city, which the following year commissioned him to play the organ on the occasion of the feast of Saint Cecilia and in December 1690 for the litanies sung monthly in the church of S. Carlo ai Catinari.In 1688 his oratorio Iefte, was performed at the Roman Seminary. He composed a cantata for three voices in two parts, performed in September 1689 for a fencing academy of the master Francesco Antonio Marcelli. Later, his oratorio Sacri amoris triumphus in conversion S Augustini Hipponensis Episcopi was performed in Lent 1694 at the SS. Crocifisso di S. Marcello.
He continued his musical activity away from Rome. He collaborated with Antonio Caldara and Carlo Francesco Pollarolo on the opera L'oracolo in sogno, performed in Mantua in June 1699.
In 1701 his oratorio Iefte was performed again with the title Il sacrificio di Iefte in Faenza in the house of the marquis Muzio Spada.
During the carnival of 1704, his pastoral drama Il trionfo d'amore was performed in Mantua, where he had settled. In the spring of that year, in fact, he is mentioned as the "first organist" of Duke Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga in the libretto of the pastoral fable Paride sull'Ida overo Gl'amori di Paride con Enone, performed in Mantua, which he set to music together with Caldara.
He probably had to leave Mantua following the deposition of Duke Ferdinando Carlo and the end of the duchy.
In 1713 he was in Trento as chapel master of the prince-bishop Giovanni Michele Spaur and of the cathedral. In that year, his opera La Partenope was performed in the local Teatro Gaudenti.
There is no information on the year of his death. According to Clemente Lunelli, he left Trento in 1724 to return to Mantua. However, he was living in Rome in 1720, when he addressed a petition to Prince Antonio Ottoboni in order to have a reward for music lessons given to some "Venetian ladies".
None of Quintavalle's works have survived to today.
An Antonio Quintavalle, chaplain at Torcello, who died on 28 January 1721 at the age of 45, is an homonymous.
Works
Operas
- L'oracolo in sogno
- Il trionfo d'amore
- Paride sull'Ida, ovvero Gli amori di Paride con Enone
- ''Partenope''
Oratorios
- Jefte
- ''Sacri amoris triumphus in conversione S Augustini Hipponensis Episcopi''