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Jacopo Corsi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jacopo Corsi (17 July 1561 – 29 December 1602) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque and one of Florence's leading patrons of the arts, after only the Medicis. His best-known work is Dafne (1597/98), whose score he wrote in collaboration with Jacopo Peri. Six fragments of the score have survived, two by Corsi and four by Peri. The libretto, by Ottavio Rinuccini, has survived intact. Despite priority quibbles at the time, Dafne is generally accepted as the first opera.

References

  • Christopher Headington et al., Opera: A History, 1987, pp. 21–22
  • Donald Jay Grout, A History of Western Music, 1960, p. 278
  • Carter, Tim (1985). "Music and Patronage in Late Sixteenth-Century Florence: The Case of Jacopo Corsi (1561-1602)". I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance. 1. University of Chicago Press: 57–104. doi:10.2307/4603641. JSTOR 4603641. S2CID 191347774.