Meet the Composers

From The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music

Giuseppe Tartini

BornPirano, 8 April 1692
DiedPadua, 26 Feb 1770
NationalityItalian
Occupationcomposer

   History

After abandoning plans for a monastic career he studied in Assisi (probably with Černohorský) and by 1714 had joined the orchestra at Ancona. He later spent time in Venice and Padua, where he settled in 1721 as principal violinist at the basilica of S Antonio. He worked there until 1765 except for a period in Prague (1723-6). Besides performing with success, he founded in 1727-8 a ‘school’ of violin instruction; his many pupils included J. G. Graun, Nardini and Naumann.

Tartini was one of the foremost Italian instrumental composers, writing over 400 works: these include violin concertos and sonatas (many with virtuoso solo parts), trio sonatas and sonatas for string ensemble. Most have three movements, ordered slow-fast-fast (sonatas) or fast-slow-fast (concertos). His later works in particular approach Classical structures and display galant features, including regular four-bar melodic phrases. Elaborate cadence formulae are especially characteristic. He also composed some sacred music. Noteworthy among his writings are a work on violin playing and ornamentation, Traité des agréments de la musique - published only in1771 but thought to have been written earlier (L. Mozart, in 1756, is thought to have borrowed from it, but it may be the other way round) - and two treatises on the acoustical foundations of harmony (1754, 1767), in which his discovery of the phenomenon is discussed.

   Works

Orchestral Music
   ca.135 vn concs., other concertos

Chamber Music
   4 sinfonie and sonatas, strs, bc
   ca.40 trio sonatas
   ca.135 sonatas, vn, bc, incl. ‘Devil’’’’’’’’s Trill’, g
   L′arte del arco, variations (ca.1747)
   ca.30 sonatas, single movts, vn solo

Vocal Music
   sacred pieces