Classical Music CDs at ArkivMusic Cart Wish List My Account Gift Certificates Newsletter Help
Composers | Conductors | Performers | Ensembles | Operas | Labels | ArkivCDs | DVDs | More... New ArkivMusic Reissues On Sale
New Releases Recommendations Top Sellers On Sale CDs Under $10 Broadway Reissues Super Audio CDs MP3s Blu-ray Discs Listen Magazine
 Home > Composers >

WGBH Radio WGBH Radio theclassicalstation.org
Leonardo Vinci
Born: 1690; Strongoli   Died: May 27, 1730; Naples, Italy  
Leonardo Vinci's life would have been fine fodder for one of his own operas. A composer whose music turned the heads of Vivaldi and Handel, he became an overnight success in comic opera at age 29. As a composer of dramatic works, he was an early collaborator with librettist Metastasio, and developed a long-running professional feud with composer Nicola Porpora. At one point Vinci even sabotaged one of Porpora's productions. He died young, perhaps ...
Read more
See all recordings available (13)   OR   Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
Leonardo Vinci titles in:
New Releases   Recommended   ArkivCD  
Works
Artaserse: Fra cento affanni e cento (1)
Artaserse: No che non ha la sorte...Vo solcando un mar crudele (1)
Catone in Utica: Confusa Smarrita (1)
Catone in Utica: Confusa, smarrita (2)
Erighetta e Don Chilone (1)
Farnace: Chi temea Giove regnante (3)
Il Medo: Cervo in bosco (1)
Lo cecato fauzo: Cacchimma fauza (1)
Mesta, oh Dio, fra queste selve (1)
Sinfonia for Strings (1)
Sonata for Flute and Basso Continuo in D major (2)
Teco, si, vengo anch'io (1)
When will unhappy fate (1)
Whither do you fly (1)
Biography by James Reel
Leonardo Vinci's life would have been fine fodder for one of his own operas. A composer whose music turned the heads of Vivaldi and Handel, he became an overnight success in comic opera at age 29. As a composer of dramatic works, he was an early collaborator with librettist Metastasio, and developed a long-running professional feud with composer Nicola Porpora. At one point Vinci even sabotaged one of Porpora's productions. He died young, perhaps poisoned because of an illicit love affair.

Vinci entered a conservatory in Naples in 1708; within three years his tuition was waived because he was already working as a student teacher. After 10 years of study and a brief stint working for a local prince, Vinci made a splendid debut as an opera composer in 1719 with his comedy Lo cecato fauzo at the Teatro Fiorentini in Naples. He quickly became the theater's dominant composer, specializing in comic works in Neapolitan dialect. In 1722 he tried his hand at a more serious opera, Publio Cornelio Scipione, at the Teatro San Bartolomeo, and its immediate success led him to devote most of his energy to dramatic opera thereafter.

His first commission from a Roman theater came in 1724, and from that point he would write one to three operas each year for Rome alone, while also composing for Venice, Parma, and Naples. In 1726 came the first of his collaborations with Metastasio; their work was regarded as a model of the interdependence of words and music. Meanwhile, an old rivalry between Vinci and Porpora intensified through their competing productions in Rome and Venice.

Vinci succeeded Alessandro Scarlatti as vice-director of the royal chapel in Napels in 1725; these duties initially limited his opera activity, but by 1728 he was again cranking out stage works at something resembling his former pace. He also took on extra, short-time work at his old conservatory, where he taught Pergolesi, and the monastery of Santa Caterina a Formiello, where he wrote some sacred works. In 1729 he added impressario at the Teatro delle Dame to his duties, also serving as that theater's principle composer. Meanwhile, Vinci masterminded the sabotage of Porpora's new work being presented in Rome, which was hardly necessary because Vinci was by then and by far the more popular composer. Not for long, though; he died in Naples, rumored to have been poisoned not by the jealous Porpora, but in relation to a romantic misadventure.
 About ArkivMusic  Contact Us  Partner Program  Institutional Sales  Terms & Conditions  Privacy Policy  Help  Your Account  Shortcuts  
ArkivMusic - The Source for Classical Music!

Copyright ArkivMusic LLC, 2012.
Data supplied by Rovi Data Solutions, Inc. Copyright 1948-2012. For personal use only. All rights reserved.