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Vincenzo Galilei

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Della musica antica et della moderna,1581

Vincenzo Galilei(3 April 1520 - 2 July 1591) was an Italianlutenist,composer,andmusic theorist.His children included the astronomer and physicistGalileo Galileiand the lute virtuoso and composerMichelagnolo Galilei.Vincenzo was a figure in the musical life of the lateRenaissanceand contributed significantly to the musical revolution which demarcates the beginning of theBaroqueera.

In his study of pitch and string tension, Galilei produced perhaps the first non-linear mathematical description of a natural phenomenon known to history.[1]Some credit him with directing the activity of his son away from pure, abstract mathematics and towards experimentation using mathematical quantitative description of the results, a direction of importance for the history ofphysicsandnatural science.

Biography

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He was born in 1520 inSanta Maria a Monte,near Pisa, Tuscany[2]and began studying the lute at an early age. His mother was fromSan VincenzonearLivorno.[3]Sometime before 1562 he moved toPisa,where on 5 July he marriedGiulia Ammannatiof a noble family. Galileo Galilei was the oldest of six or seven children; another son,Michelagnolo,born in 1575,[4]became an accomplished lutenist and composer.

Galilei was a skilled player of thelutewho early in life attracted the attention of powerful patrons. In 1563 he metGioseffo Zarlino,the most important music theorist of the sixteenth century, inVenice,and began studying with him.[5][6]Somewhat later he became interested in the attempts to reviveancient Greek musicand drama, by way of his association with theFlorentine Camerata,[7]a group of poets, musicians and intellectuals led by CountGiovanni de' Bardi,as well as his contacts withGirolamo Mei,[8]the foremost scholar of the time of ancient Greek music. Galilei composed two books ofmadrigals,as well as music for lute, and a considerable quantity of music for voice and lute; this latter category is considered to be his most important contribution as it anticipated in many ways the style of the early Baroque.

The use ofrecitativeinoperais widely attributed to Galilei, since he was one of the inventors ofmonody,the musical style closest to recitative.

Acoustics and music theory

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Galilei promotedequal temperament.[9]In his exploration of tuning and keys, he composed 24 groups of dances, "clearly related to 12 major and 12 minor keys" (1584).

Some of Galilei's most important theoretical contributions involve the treatment ofdissonance:he had a largely modern conception, allowing passing dissonance "if the voices flow smoothly" as well as on-the-beat dissonance, such assuspensions,which he called "essential dissonance." This describes Baroque practice, especially as he defines rules for resolution of suspensions by a preliminary leap away from, followed by a return to, the expected note of resolution.

Vincenzo Galilei was one of the pioneers in the systematic study ofacoustics,mainly in his research (assisted by his son Galileo) in the mathematical formula of stretched strings. Galileo told his biographer that Vincenzo introduced him to the idea of systematic testing and measurement through their Pisa house basement which was strung with lengths of lute string materials, each of different lengths, with different weights attached.

Galilei made discoveries in acoustics, particularly involving the physics ofvibrating stringsand columns of air. He discovered that while the ratio of an interval is proportional to string lengths — for example, aperfect fifthhas the proportions of 3:2 — it varied with thesquare rootof the tension applied (and the cube root of concave volumes of air). Weights suspended from strings of equal length need to be in a ratio of 9:4 to produce the 3:2 perfect fifth.

This work was taken further byMarin Mersennewho formulated the current law of vibrating strings. Mersenne was only three years old when Vincenzo died, but he would later maintain a regular link to Galileo (and many other scientists). He treated Galileo as a prized member of his scientific network. He communicated Galileo's ideas for a pendulum clock toChristiaan Huygens(who improved on it).

Despite being a priest, Mersenne defended Galileo when he came under attack by the church in 1633, but he also questioned Galileo's claims and disputed the accuracy of some of Galileo's findings. He conducted his own duplicate experiments which improved on their accuracy.[10]

References

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  1. ^Cohen, H. F. (1984).Quantifying Music: The Science of Music at.Springer. pp. 78–84.ISBN90-277-1637-4.
  2. ^"Vincenzo Galilei".brunelleschi.imss.fi.it.Retrieved23 February2019.
  3. ^William Shea,La Rivoluzione scientifica–I protagonisti: Galileo Galilei,in:Storia della Scienza Treccani(2012), Cap. XVIII.
  4. ^Fabris, Dinko (2011)."Galileo and Music: A Family Affair - aspbooks.org"(PDF).aspbooks.org.Retrieved23 February2019.
  5. ^"Galilei, Vincenzo".galileo.rice.edu.Retrieved23 February2019.
  6. ^"The Galileo Project | Family | Vincenzo Galilei".galileo.rice.edu.Retrieved23 February2019.
  7. ^Einstein, Alfred (1 October 1937)."Vincenzo Galilei and the Instructive Duo".Music and Letters(4): 360–368.doi:10.1093/ml/XVIII.4.360.Retrieved23 February2019.
  8. ^image of letter written byG.MeiRetrieved 2011-12-01
  9. ^"Tuning & Temperament".16 January 2016.
  10. ^"Marin Mersenne | Encyclopedia".encyclopedia.Retrieved23 February2019.

Sources

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  • Palisca, Claude. "Vincenzo Galilei", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed March 7, 2007),(subscription access)
  • Reese, Gustave,Music in the Renaissance.New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954.ISBN0-393-09530-4
  • Sadie, Stanley, ed.Vincenzo Galilei,The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians,20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980.ISBN1-56159-174-2[Retrieved 2004-05-27]
  • Slonimsky, Nicolas, ed.The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians,8th ed. New York, Schirmer Books, 1993.ISBN0-02-872416-X[Retrieved 2004-05-27]
  • Fix, Adam. “Esperienza,Teacher of All Things: Vincenzo Galilei’s Music as Artisanal Epistemology,”Nuncius34, no. 3 (2019): 535–74.
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Books by Vincenzo Galilei