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{{short description|Italian composer}}
'''Francesca Caccini''' (], ] – probably ]) was an ] composer, singer, ], and music teacher of the early ] era. She was the daughter of ], and was probably the most famous and influential female European composer, in any genre, between 12th-century ] and the ]. Her opera, ''La liberazione di Ruggiero'', was the first Italian ] to be performed outside of Italy.
{{Hatnote|"La Cecchina (singer)" redirects here. For the opera known as ''La Cecchina'', see '']''.}}
]
'''Francesca Caccini''' ({{IPA|it|franˈtʃeska katˈtʃiːni|}}; 18 September 1587 – between 1641 and 1645 most likely; or she may have remarried.<ref>Cusick, Suzanne G. "Caccini, Francesca." Grove Music Online. 2001; Accessed 17 Oct. 2023. https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-90000380256.</ref>) was an Italian composer, singer, ]nist, poet, and music teacher of the early ] era. She was also known by the nickname "La Cecchina" {{IPA|it|la tʃekˈkiːna|}}, given to her by the ]s and probably a diminutive of "Francesca".{{sfn|Alexander and Savino|1997|p=20}} She was the daughter of ]. Her only surviving stage work, '']'', is widely considered the oldest opera by a woman composer.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=McVicker|first=Mary Frech|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/630498292|title=Women composers of classical music : 369 biographies from 1550 into the 20th century|date=2011|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-4397-0|location=Jefferson, N.C.|oclc=630498292}}</ref> As a female composer she helped to solidify the agency and the cultural and political programs of her female patron.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Francesca-Caccini|title=Francesca Caccini|author=Rebecca Cypess|date=14 September 2023 }}</ref>


== Life == ==Personal life==


=== Early life ===
Francesca was born in ], most likely receiving her early musical training with her father. Her first recorded appearance in public is as a singer at the wedding of ] and ] in ]; her father took part in organizing and composing the music for the sumptuous entertainment involved. In ] when the entire Caccini family visited ], Henry praised her singing effusively&mdash;"you are the best singer in all of France"&mdash;and asked her to stay at his court, but the Florentine officials denied his request, and she returned to Italy, where her fame continued to grow. Shortly afterwards she attracted the attention of ] as well, who praised her singing and instrumental performance. In ] she married a member of the ], ].
Caccini was born in ], and received a humanistic education (Latin, some Greek, as well as modern languages and literature, mathematics) in addition to early musical training with her father. According to Liliana Panella, the first well-founded testimony of Francesca's singer's activity, together with her sister Settimia, at the Medici court, is 1602: in his diary Cesare Tinghi notes that on 3 April 1602 St. Nicholas church in Pisa, where the court moved every year during Lent, polychoral music was directed by "Giulio Romano , having the wife (the second wife, Margherita) and the two daughters singing well".<ref name="Pannella">{{cite book|author=AA. VV.|title=Dizionario Biografico degli italiani|editor=Istituto Enciclopedia Italiana/ Liliana Pannella|year=1973|page=20}} Rome</ref>


In her early life, Caccini performed with her parents, her half-brother Pompeo, her sister ], and possibly other unnamed Caccini pupils in an ensemble contemporaries referred to as ''le donne di Giulio Romano''. After she was hired by the court, she continued to perform with the family ensemble until Settimia's marriage and resulting move to Mantua caused its breakup. Caccini served the Medici court as a teacher, chamber singer, rehearsal coach and composer of both chamber and stage music until early 1627. By 1614 she was the court's most highly paid musician, in no small part because her musical virtuosity so well exemplified an idea of female excellence projected by Tuscany's de facto Regent, Grand-Duchess ]. By 1623 she earned 240 ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Women Composers: Music Through the Ages|last=Cunningham|first=Caroline|publisher=G.K. Hill|year=1996|editor-last=Schleifer|editor-first=Martha Furman|location=New York|pages=226–228|editor-last2=Glickman|editor-first2=Sylvia}}</ref>
During this time she was also developing her skill as a composer. In conjunction with the librettist Michelangelo Buonaroti the Younger (grand-nephew of the artist) she wrote the music for many ] at the ] court, and she also began writing in the then-new form of ].


=== Later life ===
One of her greatest successes came in ] when she wrote an opera for a visiting prince from ], Ladislaus Sigismondo (later ]). This opera, ''La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina'', was also performed in ] in ]; this is the earliest recorded performance of an Italian opera outside of Italy.
After Caccini's first husband (Giovanni Battista Signorini, with whom she had one daughter, Margherita, in 1622) died in December 1626, she quickly arranged to marry again in October 1627, this time to a music-loving nobleman in ], Tommaso Raffaelli. Although her legal name remained Francesca de Giulio Caccini, it was only the discovery of documents using Francesca Raffaelli that makes it possible to find evidence of her life from 1627 to 1634.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Cusick|first=Suzanne G.|date=1993|title="Thinking from Women's Lives": Francesca Caccini after 1627|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/742392|journal=The Musical Quarterly|volume=77|issue=3|pages=484–507|doi=10.1093/mq/77.3.484|jstor=742392|issn=0027-4631}}</ref>
She lived in Raffaelli's Lucchese homes, apparently bearing a son (also Tommaso, in 1628), and having some musical relationship to the Buonvisi family in Lucca, until his death in 1630.<ref name="Cypess"> Accessed 2 November 2017</ref> Although as the wife of a nobleman she had declined at least one request to perform (in Parma, in 1628), once she was widowed Caccini immediately tried to return to serve the Medici court. Her return delayed by the plagues of 1630–33, by 1634 Caccini was back in Florence with her two children, serving as music teacher not only to her daughter Margherita but also to the Medici princesses who lived at or frequently visited the convent of La Crocetta, and composing and performing chamber music and minor entertainments for the women's court. Caccini stopped serving the Medicis on 8 May 1641, and disappeared from the public record.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Briscoe|first1=James R.|url=https://archive.org/details/historicalanthol0000unse|title=Historical Anthology of Music by Women|year=1987|publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=0-253-21296-0}}</ref>


== Professional career ==
Records of her later life are sparse. Florentine records show that a Francesca Caccini, wife of a senator, died in ], which would imply that she remarried if this was her; alternatively that may have been someone else, and she may have died earlier. A death date of ] is given in some sources.
Caccini is believed to have been a quick and prolific composer, equal in productivity to her court colleagues ] and ]. Very little of her music survives. Most of her stage music was composed for performance in comedies by poet ] (grand-nephew of the artist) such as ''La Tancia'' (1613), ''Il passatempo'' (1614) and ''La fiera'' (1619). In 1618 she published a collection of thirty-six solo songs and soprano/bass duets (''Il primo libro delle musiche'')<ref name=Cypess/> that is a compendium of contemporary styles, ranging from intensely moving, harmonically adventurous laments to joyful sacred songs in Italian and Latin, to witty strophic songs about the joys and perils of romantic love.<ref> Accessed 31 October 2017</ref>


In winter 1625 Caccini composed all the music for a 75-minute "comedy-ballet" entitled ''La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina'' which was performed for the visiting crown prince of Poland, Ladislaus Sigismondo (later ]). Combining witty parodies of early opera's stock scenes and self-important characters with moments of surprising emotional intensity, the score shows that Caccini had mastered the full range of musico-theatrical devices in her time and that she had had a strong sense of large-scale musical design. ''La liberazione'' so pleased the prince that he had it performed in ] in 1628. This is also widely regarded as the first opera written by a woman.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Silbert|first=Doris|date=1946|title=Francesca Caccini, Called La Cecchina|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/739564|journal=The Musical Quarterly|volume=32|issue=1|pages=50–62|doi=10.1093/mq/XXXII.1.50|jstor=739564|issn=0027-4631}}</ref> There is no evidence to suggest that Caccini composed any of the accompanying poetry, however, which is instead by her contemporaries Michelangelo Buonarroti, Andrea Salvadori and Francesco Gualterotti.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book|last1=Cusick|first1=Suzanne G.|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226338101.001.0001|title=Francesca Caccini at the Medici Court|last2=Stimpson|first2=Catharine R.|date=2009|publisher=University of Chicago Press|doi=10.7208/chicago/9780226338101.001.0001|isbn=978-0-226-13213-6}}</ref>
== Works ==


=== Compositional style ===
Francesca wrote five operas, four of which have been lost (only ''La liberazione di Ruggiero'' has survived). Of her numerous smaller compositions, sacred, secular, vocal and instrumental, the only surviving collection is her publication of ], ''Il primo libro delle musiche'', which contains pieces for one or two voices and ]. They include ], ], settings of ]s, ] variations, as well as several sacred pieces which can be classified as early Baroque ]s. In style they are ], and in some ways she exceeds her father in melodic and harmonic daring; clearly she was writing for her own voice, and for her own virtuoso singing capabilities much of the time.
Caccini's musical and compositional style has been likened to that of ] and ], and she started composing music after the closing of the ] period, playing a key part in developing the ] style of music.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2013-09-17|title=Francesca Caccini, the composer|url=https://blog.oup.com/2013/09/francesca-caccini-composer-opera/|access-date=2021-08-12|website=OUPblog|language=en}}</ref> She composed within a very innovative musical context.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Eschner|first=Kat|title=Three Things to Know About Francesca Caccini, the Renaissance Musical Genius You've Never Heard Of|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/francesca-caccini-sixteenth-century-musical-genius-youve-never-heard-180964884/|access-date=2021-08-12|website=Smithsonian Magazine|language=en}}</ref> For many of her songs, she was the author of the accompanying poetry, which also tended to be comedic.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-01-21|title=Composer Profile: Francesca Caccini, Opera's First Female Composer|url=https://operawire.com/composer-profile-francesca-caccini-operas-first-female-composer/|access-date=2021-08-12|website=Opera Wire|language=en-US}}</ref>


Although the musical pieces did not denote a specific instrument for playing the accompaniment, a ] could be used.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Duncan|first=Cheryll|date=2018|title=The Siren of Heaven—A Glimpse into the Life and Works of Francesca Caccini by Juliet Fraser (soprano) and Jamie Akers (theorbo) (review)|url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/696050|journal=Early Modern Women|volume=12|issue=2|pages=218–223|doi=10.1353/emw.2018.0022|s2cid=194970810|issn=2378-4776}}</ref>
== References ==


==Works==
* Article on Francesca Caccini, in ''Historical Anthology of Music by Women.'' James R. Briscoe, ed. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Indiana, 1986. ISBN 0253212960 Note: both this article and the Grove article are by Carolyn Raney.
Francesca Caccini wrote some or all of the music for at least six staged works. All but ''La liberazione di Ruggiero'' and some excerpts from ''La Tancia'' and ''Il passatempo'' published in the 1618 collection are believed lost. Her surviving scores reveal Caccini to have taken extraordinary care over the notation of her music, focusing special attention on the rhythmic placement of syllables and words, and on the precise notation of often very long, melodically fluid vocal melismas. Although her music is not especially notable for the expressive dissonances made fashionable by her contemporary ], Caccini was a master of dramatic harmonic surprise: in her music it is harmony, more than counterpoint, that most powerfully communicates affect.
* Article "Francesca Caccini." ''The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'', ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1561591742
* "Francesca Caccini, Musician to the Medici and her ''Primo Libro.''" Carolyn Raney, Ph.D. dissertation, New York University, 1971.


Opera and stage works:
]

]
*''La Stiava'' (performed 1607)<ref name="Cypess" /> (lost)<ref name=":1" />
]
*''La mascherata, delle ninfe di Senna'', ]to, ], ], 1611<ref name=":1" />
]
*''La tancia'', ], Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1611<ref name=":1" />
]
*''Il passatempo'', incidental music to balletto, Pallazo Pitti, Florence, 1614<ref name=":1" />
*''Il ballo delle Zingane'', balletto, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, music lost, 1615<ref name=":1" />
*Il Primo libro delle musiche a 1–2 voci e basso continuo (1618)<ref name=":1" />
*''La fiera'', incidental music, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1619<ref name=":1" />
*''Il martirio de S. Agata'', Florence, 1622<ref name=":1" />
*''La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina'', ], ], Florence (1625)<ref name=":1" />
*''Rinaldo inamorato'', commissioned by Prince Wladislaw of Poland, 1626.<ref name=":1" />

== See also ==

* ]
* ]
*]

==References==
'''Notes'''
{{Reflist}}

'''Sources'''
*{{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Alexander and Savino|1997}}|reference=Alexander, Ronald James and Savino, Richard (1997). . Indiana University Press. {{ISBN|0-253-21139-5}}.}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite book|last=Cusick|first= Suzanne G.|title=Francesca Caccini at the Medici Court: Music and the Circulation of Power|publisher=University of Chicago Press|date=July 2009|isbn=978-0-226-13212-9}}
*{{cite book|editor-last=Fischer|editor-first= Christine |title=La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina Räume und Inszenierungen in Francesca Caccinis Ballettoper (Florenz, 1625)|publisher=Chronos|date= 2015|isbn=978-3-0340-1273-7}}
*Harness, Kelley (2006). . University of Chicago Press. {{ISBN|0-226-31659-9}}
*{{cite book|last=Raney|first=Carolyn|title=Francesca Caccini, Musician to the Medici and her ''Primo Libro'', Ph.D. dissertation|publisher=New York University|year=1971}}
*{{cite book|last=Raney|first=Carolyn|chapter=Francesca Caccini|title=The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians|editor=Stanley Sadie|location=London|publisher=Macmillan Publishers Ltd.|year=1980|isbn =1-56159-174-2}}
*{{cite book|last=Raney|first=Carolyn|chapter=Francesca Caccini|title=Historical Anthology of Music by Women|editor=James R. Briscoe|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington, Indiana|year=1986|isbn=0-253-21296-0|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/historicalanthol0000unse|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/historicalanthol0000unse}}
*Miranda, Marina Lobato, Georgia State University.
*Bujić, Bojan; Rose, Gloria (1968). ]&nbsp;0027-4224.
*Raney, Carolyn (1967). "Francesca Caccini's 'Primo Libro'". ''Music & Letters.'' ]&nbsp;0027-4224.
*Duncan, Cheryll (2018). "The Siren of Heaven—A Glimpse into the Life and Works of Francesca Caccini by Juliet Fraser (soprano) and Jamie Akers (theorbo) (review)". ''Early Modern Women''. ]&nbsp;2378-4776.

==External links==
{{commons category}}
*{{IMSLP|id=Caccini, Francesca}}
*{{OL author|4623084A}}
* at the ]

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Caccini, Francesca}}
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Latest revision as of 23:29, 4 November 2024

Italian composer "La Cecchina (singer)" redirects here. For the opera known as La Cecchina, see La buona figliuola.
Francesca Caccini.

Francesca Caccini ([franˈtʃeska katˈtʃiːni]; 18 September 1587 – between 1641 and 1645 most likely; or she may have remarried.) was an Italian composer, singer, lutenist, poet, and music teacher of the early Baroque era. She was also known by the nickname "La Cecchina" [la tʃekˈkiːna], given to her by the Florentines and probably a diminutive of "Francesca". She was the daughter of Giulio Caccini. Her only surviving stage work, La liberazione di Ruggiero, is widely considered the oldest opera by a woman composer. As a female composer she helped to solidify the agency and the cultural and political programs of her female patron.

Personal life

Early life

Caccini was born in Florence, and received a humanistic education (Latin, some Greek, as well as modern languages and literature, mathematics) in addition to early musical training with her father. According to Liliana Panella, the first well-founded testimony of Francesca's singer's activity, together with her sister Settimia, at the Medici court, is 1602: in his diary Cesare Tinghi notes that on 3 April 1602 St. Nicholas church in Pisa, where the court moved every year during Lent, polychoral music was directed by "Giulio Romano , having the wife (the second wife, Margherita) and the two daughters singing well".

In her early life, Caccini performed with her parents, her half-brother Pompeo, her sister Settimia, and possibly other unnamed Caccini pupils in an ensemble contemporaries referred to as le donne di Giulio Romano. After she was hired by the court, she continued to perform with the family ensemble until Settimia's marriage and resulting move to Mantua caused its breakup. Caccini served the Medici court as a teacher, chamber singer, rehearsal coach and composer of both chamber and stage music until early 1627. By 1614 she was the court's most highly paid musician, in no small part because her musical virtuosity so well exemplified an idea of female excellence projected by Tuscany's de facto Regent, Grand-Duchess Christina of Lorraine. By 1623 she earned 240 scudi.

Later life

After Caccini's first husband (Giovanni Battista Signorini, with whom she had one daughter, Margherita, in 1622) died in December 1626, she quickly arranged to marry again in October 1627, this time to a music-loving nobleman in Lucca, Tommaso Raffaelli. Although her legal name remained Francesca de Giulio Caccini, it was only the discovery of documents using Francesca Raffaelli that makes it possible to find evidence of her life from 1627 to 1634. She lived in Raffaelli's Lucchese homes, apparently bearing a son (also Tommaso, in 1628), and having some musical relationship to the Buonvisi family in Lucca, until his death in 1630. Although as the wife of a nobleman she had declined at least one request to perform (in Parma, in 1628), once she was widowed Caccini immediately tried to return to serve the Medici court. Her return delayed by the plagues of 1630–33, by 1634 Caccini was back in Florence with her two children, serving as music teacher not only to her daughter Margherita but also to the Medici princesses who lived at or frequently visited the convent of La Crocetta, and composing and performing chamber music and minor entertainments for the women's court. Caccini stopped serving the Medicis on 8 May 1641, and disappeared from the public record.

Professional career

Caccini is believed to have been a quick and prolific composer, equal in productivity to her court colleagues Jacopo Peri and Marco da Gagliano. Very little of her music survives. Most of her stage music was composed for performance in comedies by poet Michelangelo Buonarroti the Younger (grand-nephew of the artist) such as La Tancia (1613), Il passatempo (1614) and La fiera (1619). In 1618 she published a collection of thirty-six solo songs and soprano/bass duets (Il primo libro delle musiche) that is a compendium of contemporary styles, ranging from intensely moving, harmonically adventurous laments to joyful sacred songs in Italian and Latin, to witty strophic songs about the joys and perils of romantic love.

In winter 1625 Caccini composed all the music for a 75-minute "comedy-ballet" entitled La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina which was performed for the visiting crown prince of Poland, Ladislaus Sigismondo (later Władysław IV). Combining witty parodies of early opera's stock scenes and self-important characters with moments of surprising emotional intensity, the score shows that Caccini had mastered the full range of musico-theatrical devices in her time and that she had had a strong sense of large-scale musical design. La liberazione so pleased the prince that he had it performed in Warsaw in 1628. This is also widely regarded as the first opera written by a woman. There is no evidence to suggest that Caccini composed any of the accompanying poetry, however, which is instead by her contemporaries Michelangelo Buonarroti, Andrea Salvadori and Francesco Gualterotti.

Compositional style

Caccini's musical and compositional style has been likened to that of Monteverdi and Jacopo Peri, and she started composing music after the closing of the Renaissance period, playing a key part in developing the Baroque style of music. She composed within a very innovative musical context. For many of her songs, she was the author of the accompanying poetry, which also tended to be comedic.

Although the musical pieces did not denote a specific instrument for playing the accompaniment, a theorbo could be used.

Works

Francesca Caccini wrote some or all of the music for at least six staged works. All but La liberazione di Ruggiero and some excerpts from La Tancia and Il passatempo published in the 1618 collection are believed lost. Her surviving scores reveal Caccini to have taken extraordinary care over the notation of her music, focusing special attention on the rhythmic placement of syllables and words, and on the precise notation of often very long, melodically fluid vocal melismas. Although her music is not especially notable for the expressive dissonances made fashionable by her contemporary Monteverdi, Caccini was a master of dramatic harmonic surprise: in her music it is harmony, more than counterpoint, that most powerfully communicates affect.

Opera and stage works:

  • La Stiava (performed 1607) (lost)
  • La mascherata, delle ninfe di Senna, balletto, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1611
  • La tancia, incidental music, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1611
  • Il passatempo, incidental music to balletto, Pallazo Pitti, Florence, 1614
  • Il ballo delle Zingane, balletto, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, music lost, 1615
  • Il Primo libro delle musiche a 1–2 voci e basso continuo (1618)
  • La fiera, incidental music, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, 1619
  • Il martirio de S. Agata, Florence, 1622
  • La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina, musical comedy, Villa Poggio Imperiale, Florence (1625)
  • Rinaldo inamorato, commissioned by Prince Wladislaw of Poland, 1626.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Cusick, Suzanne G. "Caccini, Francesca." Grove Music Online. 2001; Accessed 17 Oct. 2023. https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-90000380256.
  2. Alexander and Savino 1997, p. 20.
  3. ^ McVicker, Mary Frech (2011). Women composers of classical music : 369 biographies from 1550 into the 20th century. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-4397-0. OCLC 630498292.
  4. Rebecca Cypess (14 September 2023). "Francesca Caccini".
  5. AA. VV. (1973). Istituto Enciclopedia Italiana/ Liliana Pannella (ed.). Dizionario Biografico degli italiani. p. 20. Rome
  6. Cunningham, Caroline (1996). Schleifer, Martha Furman; Glickman, Sylvia (eds.). Women Composers: Music Through the Ages. New York: G.K. Hill. pp. 226–228.
  7. Cusick, Suzanne G. (1993). ""Thinking from Women's Lives": Francesca Caccini after 1627". The Musical Quarterly. 77 (3): 484–507. doi:10.1093/mq/77.3.484. ISSN 0027-4631. JSTOR 742392.
  8. ^ Rebecca Cypess: "Francesca Caccini: Italian composer and singer" at britannica.com Accessed 2 November 2017
  9. Briscoe, James R. (1987). Historical Anthology of Music by Women. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-21296-0.
  10. Primo Libro delle Musiche (Caccini, Francesca) at IMSLP.org Accessed 31 October 2017
  11. Silbert, Doris (1946). "Francesca Caccini, Called La Cecchina". The Musical Quarterly. 32 (1): 50–62. doi:10.1093/mq/XXXII.1.50. ISSN 0027-4631. JSTOR 739564.
  12. Cusick, Suzanne G.; Stimpson, Catharine R. (2009). Francesca Caccini at the Medici Court. University of Chicago Press. doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226338101.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-226-13213-6.
  13. "Francesca Caccini, the composer". OUPblog. 2013-09-17. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  14. Eschner, Kat. "Three Things to Know About Francesca Caccini, the Renaissance Musical Genius You've Never Heard Of". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  15. "Composer Profile: Francesca Caccini, Opera's First Female Composer". Opera Wire. 2021-01-21. Retrieved 2021-08-12.
  16. Duncan, Cheryll (2018). "The Siren of Heaven—A Glimpse into the Life and Works of Francesca Caccini by Juliet Fraser (soprano) and Jamie Akers (theorbo) (review)". Early Modern Women. 12 (2): 218–223. doi:10.1353/emw.2018.0022. ISSN 2378-4776. S2CID 194970810.

Sources

Further reading

External links

Categories: