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Tarquinio Merula
Born: 1594; Cremona, Italy   Died: December 10, 1665; Cremona, Italy  
The date for the birth of Tarquinio Merula is guesswork stemming from the fact that he received his confirmation on April 23, 1607, and 12 is the customary age for that. He seems to have been a contentious person and was frequently in trouble, but is recognized as one of the most progressive Italian composers of the early Baroque.

His first post appears to have been as organist of San Bartolomeo, a Carmelite Fathers' church in Cremona. He
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Works
Alemana, for ensemble (1)
Ballo detto Eccardo (1)
Ballo detto Pollicio (2)
Cantate jubilate (1)
Canzon (1)
Canzon "la Cattarina" (3)
Canzona la Luisignola (1)
Canzona, for keyboard (1)
Canzone for 2 violins & violone ("La Strada") (1)
Canzone quinta a quattro detta la chremasca (1)
Canzonetta spirituale sopra "Alla Nanna" (Curtio Precipitato et altri Capricii composti in diversi (2)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12 (2)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12: Canzona "La Pighetta" (1)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12: Canzona "La Strada" (2)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12: Chiacona à 3 (1)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12: Ciaccona (6)
Canzoni overo sonate concertate per chiesa e camera, libro terzo, Op. 12: Sonata per camera no 3 (1)
Canzoni overo Sonate concertate per chiesa e camera: La Treccha (2)
Capriccio (2)
Capriccio cromatico (6)
Capriccio cromatico for organ in D major (1)
Chaconne (1)
Che nove arti son queste, madrigal (1)
Chiaccona à 2, Op. 3 (1)
Chiacona (from Canzoni overo sonate ..., 1637) (3)
Ciaccona, for ensemble (1)
Ciacona (2)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii composti, Op. 13: Canzonetta spirituale sopra alla Nanna (6)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Chi vuol ch'io m'inamori (1)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Folle è ben che si crede (2)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Hor ch'è tempo di dormire "Canzonetta Spirituale" (10)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Menti lingua bugiarda (1)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Quando gli ucelli portaranno i Zoccoli (2)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Sentirete una canzonetta (3)
Curtio precipitato et altri capricii, Op. 13: Un bambin che va alla scola (1)
Favus distillans (1)
Folle e ben che si crede (1)
Gaudeamus omnes (1)
Gaudeamus omnes (from a MS in Kremsmünster, Austria) (1)
Hor ch'è tempo di dormire, for voice & ensemble (1)
Il primo libro de motetti e sonate concertati, Op. 6: Sonata no 1 (3)
Il primo libro de motetti e sonate, Op. 6: Sonata no 2 (1)
Il quarto libro delle canzoni da suonare, Op. 17: Canzona no 17 "La Monteverde" (1)
Il quarto libro delle canzoni da suonare, Op. 17: Sonata no 3 (1)
Il secondo libro delle canzoni da suonare, Op. 9: no 11 "La Fontana" (1)
Intonazione cromatica del terzo tono (1)
Jesu dulcis memoria (1)
L' Arisia (1)
La Bersalina (1)
La Cappellina (1)
La Cattarina (2)
La Dada (2)
La ghirardella (2)
La Livia (1)
La Loda (1)
La Loda, canzona (1)
La Lusignola (2)
La Lusignuola (1)
La Marcha (1)
La Merula (1)
La Merula, canzona for consort (1)
La mia Filli è fugace, madrigal (1)
La Monteverde (2)
La Pighetta Giovanni Paolo, for 2 violins, violone & continuo (1)
La Pusterla (1)
La Zambeccara (1)
Madrigals, Book 2, Op. 10 (1)
Madrigals, Book 2, Op. 10: Su la cetra amorosa "Ciaccona" (3)
Nigra sum (from Il primo libro de motetti e sonate concertati, Venice, 1624) (1)
Ruggiero (3)
Sentirete una canzonetta (1)
Sonata cromatica (3)
Sonata no 1 (1)
Sonata Seconda (from Il Primo libro de motetti ..., 1624) (1)
Su la cetra amorosa, aria di ciaccona (1)
Su ma cestra amorosa (1)
Toccata del secondo tono (1)
Biography by Joseph Stevenson
The date for the birth of Tarquinio Merula is guesswork stemming from the fact that he received his confirmation on April 23, 1607, and 12 is the customary age for that. He seems to have been a contentious person and was frequently in trouble, but is recognized as one of the most progressive Italian composers of the early Baroque.

His first post appears to have been as organist of San Bartolomeo, a Carmelite Fathers' church in Cremona. He was engaged to serve as organist of Santa Maria Incoronata in Lodi on October 22, 1616, to a three-year contract. He renewed his contract in February, 1620, but left Lodi in January, 1621. It was most likely because he got a better job, because he next shows up in Warsaw as organist of church and chamber to Sigismund III, King of Poland.

He returned to Cremona in 1624, where he received a part-time position as provisional maestro di cappella for Laude della Madonna services. This meant that he led music at the main altar of the cathedral on Saturdays and during vigils devoted to the Virgin Mary. This was transformed into a permanent appointment in 1627. In 1628 he took an additional post, as organist of the collegiate church of Saint Agatha.

He moved to Bergamo in 1631, as maestro di cappella of Santa Maria Maggiore, where Alessandro Grandi, his predecessor, had died of the plague. He was faced with the job of rebuilding the cappella. On December 29, 1632, he was fired for "indecency" towards some of the choir boys. He threatened to sue to recover his salary, but the church officials threatened to turn the matter over to criminal authorities, and he dropped the suit and issued an apology in April, 1633.

He returned to Cremona again. He was held in high enough esteem as a musician that they demoted his successor and re-instated him as permanent maestro di cappella for the Lauds of the Madonna. The good feeling this evidenced did not last long: he began disagreeing with his superiors over salary and the scope of his job, and left after two years.

He moved back to Bergamo, and in 1638 was maestro di cappella and organist at the Cathedral next to Santa Maria Maggiore. It is customary for the choir of the latter to take part in some services at the cathedral, but in 1642 they issued an order forbidding their musicians and singers from performing under Merula's direction.

All of this did not prevent the Pope from honoring him with the Order of the Golden Spur, and from receiving election to the prestigious Accademia dei Filomusi of Bologna. The restless Merula again returned to Cremona in 1646, becoming maestro de cappella of the Marian Lauds again and organist of the cathedral. He finally found stability, holding these positions until his death nearly 20 years later.

Merula was an innovator in music. He wrote some of the first solo motets with string accompaniment, introduced bass ostinato patterns into his psalm settings, and was among the composers developing the form of the ritornello and an ABB design that became common in Italian music throughout the 1600s. He is also one of the first to use the formula of recitative followed by aria, which became the norm for solo cantatas of that era. His most significant works are his canzonas, but he also advanced the form and technique of instrumental music in several sets of sonatas and in keyboard music.
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