Mus. 996
This is one of the many manuscripts of 17th-century Italian cantatas now in Christ Church Library.
Manuscript. Cantatas by Giacomo Carissimi, Luigi Rossi and others,
copied in score; copyist unidentified, probably Italian, before
1672. (The same copyist was also responsible for Mus. 377.)
The first layer of the collection (ff. [0]-62) is headed (f.
[0r]): 'Arie à tre, et à Dui, del / Sign. Giacomo
Carissimi / Mastro in santo Apolinare / di Roma'. (These cantatas
were subsequently copied by Richard Goodson Sr into Mus. 52
and Mus. 54.) The remainder of the collection is headed (f.
63r): 'Arie à quattro, à tre, et à Dui del
/ Sign. Luigi Rossi'.
- For facsimiles of items 1 and 6 in the inventory below, see Cantatas
by Giacomo Carissimi, selected and introduced by Günther
Massenkeil, The Italian Cantata in the Seventeenth Century, 2
(New York, 1986), nos. 18-19.
- For facsimiles of items 14, 20, 11 and 34, see Cantatas by
Luigi Rossi, selected and introduced by Francesco Luisi,
The Italian Cantata in the Seventeenth Century, 1 (New York,
1986), nos. 23 and 25-7.
Table of titles and composers as shown in the manuscript. Display in modern form.
1 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Dài più riposti abissi |
ff. [0]v-7r |
2 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Sciolto havean dall'alte sponde |
ff. 7v-17v |
3 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Le ferite d'un cor |
ff. 18r-23v |
4 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
E pur vuole il Cielo |
ff. 24r-31r |
5 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissemi |
Chi fugge d'Amor gl'affanni |
ff. 31v-38r |
6 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Alma che fai, che pensi? |
ff. 38v-44v |
7 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Più non ti chieggio ò Filli |
ff. 45r-51v |
8 |
[index] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Non piangete ò Ciechi Amanti |
ff. 52r-58v |
9 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Lungi homai deh spiega |
ff. 59r-60r |
10 |
[index:] [Giacomo] Carissimi |
Vaghi rai pupille ardenti |
ff. 60v-62r |
11 |
luigi [Rossi] |
Pur è ver che fiero danno |
ff. 63v-69r |
12 |
[index:] luigi [Rossi] |
Cor dolente ferito |
ff. 69v-71r |
13 |
[index:] luigi [Rossi] |
Hor che frà l'ombre del notturno velo |
ff. 71v-73r |
14 |
luigi [Rossi] |
Hor ch'in notturna pace [Serenata] |
ff. 73v-77r |
15 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Mio cor di che paventi |
ff. 77v-79r |
16 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Udite Amanti opra d'Amor novella |
ff. 79v-81r |
17 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Di desir in desir |
ff. 81v-83r |
18 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Lasso benche mi fugga ogn'hor lontano |
ff. 83v-85r |
19 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Amanti ardire ò goder ò morire |
ff. 85v-87r |
20 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Piangea l'Aurora |
ff. 87v-98r |
21 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
In questo duro esiglio |
ff. 98v-100v |
22 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Mio core impara dal Mare |
ff. 101r-103r |
23 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Quand'io credo esser disciolto |
ff. 103v-105r |
24 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Deh' perche non m'uccide |
ff. 105v-107r |
25 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Tù parti core addio |
ff. 107v-108v |
26 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
À te mio core |
ff. 108Br-109r |
27 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Non cantar libertà |
ff. 109v-110r |
28 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Risolvetevi ò martiri |
ff. 110v-111v |
29 |
luigi [Rossi] |
Datemi pace una brev'hora almeno |
ff. 112r-113r |
30 |
[index:] luigi [Rossi] |
Queste dure catene |
ff. 113v-114r |
31 |
[index:] luigi [Rossi] |
Pene Pianti e sospiri |
ff. 114v-115r |
32 |
[index:] luigi [Rossi] |
Tù giuri ch'è mio |
ff. 115v-116v |
33 |
[index:] Luigi [correctly: Carlo Caproli] |
Pur che lo sappi tù |
ff. 117r-v |
34 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Spiega un volo cosi altero |
ff. 118r-119r |
35 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
O Cieli pietà |
ff. 119v-120v |
36 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Poi che mancò speranza |
ff. 121r-124v |
37 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Il contento che mi deste |
ff. 125r-126r |
38 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Soffrirei con lieto core |
ff. 126v-127v |
39 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Mortale che pensi |
ff. 128r-129v |
40 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Al far del di per saper che facea |
ff. 130r-131r |
41 |
[index:] Luigi [Rossi] |
Amor se devo piangere |
ff. 131v-132v |
42 |
Marc'Antonio [Pasqualini] |
Già son morto e non lo crede |
ff. 133r-134v |
43 |
Sigr Marco [Marazzoli] |
Amanti sentite Amor |
ff. 134v-136r |
44 |
Sigr Marco [Marazzoli?] |
All'assedio del cor mio |
ff. 136v-138v |
45 |
luigi [Rossi] |
Dolenti pensier miei |
ff. 139r-142r |
Oblong format, 265 x 210 mm. Struicture: ii+148+ii folios; the
textblock is foliated in modern pencil as follows: [0], 1-108,
108bis, 109-146. Small adjustments to the foliation were made
in October 2003; these will not be present in microfilms made
before that date. Two layers:
- Layer 1: ff. [0]-62 (items 1-10), with the following heading
added by the copyist on f. [0r]: 'Arie à tre, et à
Dui, del / Sigr. Giacomo Carissimi / Mastro in santo
Apolinare / di Roma'. 10 gatherings, numbered '1-10' by the copyist,
in each case in the upper left-hand corner of the first page.
Collation: A6 (ff. [0]-5), B6 (ff. 6-11), C6 (ff. 12-17), D6
(ff., 18-23), E6 (ff. 24-9), F8 (ff. 30-7), G6 (ff. 38-43), H6
(ff. 44-9), I6 (ff. 50-55), J8 (of which J1 has been excised;
ff. 56-62). The closing page of this layer (f. 62v) is blank,
without ruled staves.
- Layer 2: items ff. 63-146 (items 11-45), with the following heading
added by the copyist on f. 63r: 'Arie à quattro, à
tre, et à Dui del / Sigr. Luigi Rossi'. 12
gatherings, numbered '1-11' and (duplicate) '11' by the copyist,
in each case in the upper left-hand corner of the first page.
Collation: K6 (ff. 63-8), L6 (ff. 69-74), M6 (ff. 75-80), N6
(ff. 81-6), O6 (ff. 87-92), P8 (ff. 93-100), Q8 (ff. 101-8),
R8 (ff. 108bis, 109-15), S8 (ff. 116-23), T8 (ff. 124-31), U8
(of which one leaf has been excised; ff. 132-8), V8 (ff. 139-46).
Unused ruled staves on ff. 142v-146v.
Rear flyleaves i and ii have been used for two lists of contents;
these have been added not by the main copyist but rather by a
contemporary hand. The first lists cantatas 'di Carissimi' (items
1-9 only), the second cantatas 'di Luigi' (items 11-37, 39-45).
Composer attributions within the textblock appear to have been
added by another hand, not that of the music-copyist. 17th-century
binding of white parchment over boards. Bookplate 2 on inside
upper cover. 19th-century shelfmark: G.7.
Provenance: an annotation on the upper cover (partly illegible)
reads: 'I give this Book [to] Doctor ?Rogers'. An inscription
on f. [0r] reads: 'E Libris - Guliell: Rogers / 1672'; inside
lower cover inscribed 'W. Rogers' and 'May 29th 1672'. Front
flyleaf signed 'Timothy Nourse 1672', presumably recording a
change of ownership in that year. (For comments on Rogers and
Nourse, see below.) Then probably part of the Aldrich bequest.
The earliest catalogue entry for this item is by Hind in Dowding,
where it is listed at position P4 as 'Arie à bc, et [illegible],
dell Giacomo Carissimi. M.S.'; in Mus. 996 itself, the shelfmark
'P.4' is written in Hind's handwriting on front flyleaf i, and
the number '4' on the spine. For another item acquired by Aldrich
from Nourse, see the entry for Mus. 887-92.
Microfilm: manuscript music, reel 58.
The description above incorporates information kindly supplied
by Margaret Murata and Alessio Ruffatti.
Bibliography:
- Geoffrey Webber, 'Italian Music at the Court of Queen Christina:
Christ Church, Oxford, Mus. MS 377 and the Visit of Vincenzo
Albrici's Italian Ensemble, 1652-54', Svensk Tidskrift för
Musikforskning, 1993:2, pp. 47-53.
- Alessio Ruffatti, 'La diffusion des cantates de Luigi Rossi en
Europe', Le jardin de musique, 4 (2007), pp. 51-69.
- Alessio Ruffatti, '"Curiosi e bramosi l'oltramontani cercano
con grande diligenza in tutti i luoghi": La cantata romana del
Seicento in Europa', Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music,
13 (2008), published online at http://www.sscm-jscm.org/v13/no1/ruffatti.html.
William Rogers (1646/7-in or before 1730) matriculated from University
College, Oxford, in 1663, and was called to the bar in 1673.
He was one of a group of Roman Catholic intellectuals gathered
around the Franciscan Christopher Davenport. For a full biography,
see the entry for Rogers in The Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography.
Timothy Nourse (d. 1699) matriculated from University College,
Oxford, in 1655, and was subsequently elected a fellow of the
college. On converting to Roman Catholicism in 1673, he was deprived
of his fellowship, and moved to his estate in Newent. He is known
to have attended Mass at Somerset House, ostensibly 'to heare
the musick'. For a full biography, see the entry for Nourse in
The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
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