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11/7/2019 Domenico Della-Maria - Wikipedia

Domenico Della-Maria
Domenico Della Maria (born Marseilles 1768, died Paris 9 March 1800) was
a mandolin virtuoso and dramatic composer of operas.[1]

Contents
Early years
Alexandre Duval and The Prisoner
Other operas
End of life
References
External links

Domenico Della Maria. Lithograph


Early years by Godefroy Engelmann.

He was the son of Italian parents. His father Domenico was a roving mandolin
player, who with his wife and friends formed an itinerant company of musicians—mandolinists, guitarists, and vocalists.
During their wanderings they visited Marseilles, where their playing and singing attracted more than ordinary attention.
This success induced Della Maria and his wife to settle in this city, where they first commenced to teach their instruments,
Domenico was born. He was taught the mandolin while a child, and a few years later he received instruction on the
violoncello. He appeared publicly as an infant prodigy upon both instruments. When he was eighteen years of age Della
Maria wrote his first opera, it being performed in the theatre of his native town. This work caused a great sensation among
musicians of Marseilles, as bearing the stamp of genius. After this success, Della Maria travelled through Italy as a
mandolinist and violoncellist and did not continue his musical education until he came under the influence of Paisiello in
Naples, some years later. He was engaged in Naples as violoncellist and mandolinist in the orchestra of the Royal Chapel,
under the direction of Giovanni Paisiello. Della Maria became aware of his own lack of knowledge immediately he became
associated with the concert master and studied diligently under Paisiello for a considerable period. This began a lifelong
friendship between the two. Paisiello manifested more than ordinary interest in his talented pupil, the mandolin virtuoso,
and had shown his appreciation of the musical value of the instrument by employing it in the score of his opera, Il barbiere
di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville), which had been composed a few years previously in St. Petersburg.[1]

Alexandre Duval and The Prisoner


Della Maria, resided in Italy for about ten years, during the latter part of which period he wrote light works for numerous
secondary Italian theatres. He produced six operas, three of which were fairly successful, and one of the remainder, Il
maestro di capella, exceedingly so; its popularity brought fame to its author. In 1796, Della Maria returned to Marseilles,
and later that year in Paris. He was absolutely unknown, but in a very short time his reputation was such that he found
himself the guest and friend of the most renowned in literary and musical circles. The poet, Alexander Duval (1767-1842),
wrote a complimentary article in the Decade Philosophique, concerning the young artist, and a few years later the two were
most intimately associated. Duval mentions that one of his personal friends, to whom Della Maria had been introduced,
requested him to write some poem for the musician. Duval acting upon the earnest suggestion of his friend, made an

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11/7/2019 Domenico Della-Maria - Wikipedia

appointment with Della Maria. This interview proved to be the commencement of a productive friendship; in Duval's
words, Della Maria's classical, soulful countenance and his natural and original demeanor inspired a confidence in the poet
that was found to be entirely justified. Duval had just completed Le prisonnier (The Prisoner), which had been
commissioned for the Theatre Français; however, the desire to gratify the request of Della Maria convinced him to write
an opera. After a few alterations and additions, Duval transformed the work to a lyric comedy. Within eight days after
receiving the libretto, Della Maria composed the music. The artists of the opera were so enthusiastic about the work during
its rehearsals that its success was assured. It was performed in January 29, 1798, and the opera was published by Breitkopf
& Härtel, Leipzig. It established the name of Della Maria throughout France as an operatic composer of repute, for he
immediately brought out six other operas, his works being now great favourites with Parisians.[1]

The brilliant success of The Prisoner, was due to two primary causes, the first of which was the melodiousness and
simplicity of the vocal parts, under a duly subservient and subdued skilful orchestration, while the second factor was his
most fortunate choice of artists responsible for the principal characters. The actresses, Mile. St. Aubin, and Mile. Dugazon,
found in the opera, parts analogous to their natural dispositions, and their names were popularized throughout France by
their interpretations.[1]

Other operas
In this opera, Della Maria did not rise to extraordinary powerful conceptions; but his style was original, and this
individuality was noticeable in all his compositions. Unfortunately, his style tended towards weakening in several of his
later operas. He enjoyed an amount of success with: The Uncle Valet and The Ancient Castle, but Jacquot (The school of
mothers) (1797) and The House of Marais were both short lived. La Fausse Duegne (The false wife) was left unfinished by
the sudden death of Della Maria, and in 1802 Blangini was commissioned to complete the work.[1]

End of life
These operas were written within the space of four years, and in this brief time, Della Maria seems to have exhausted all
his natural resources. Being of a genial and sociable disposition, Della Maria had made many friends. Duval, the poet, was
one of the most sincere. They had only completed arrangements for retiring to the country together, intending to write a
new opera, when Della Maria died March 9, 1800, seized by an illness and fell in the Rue St. Honoré street. He was
assisted to an adjacent house by a passing stranger, where he expired a few hours later without regaining consciousness.
As no trace of his identity could be obtained, the police instituted enquiries, and several days elapsed before his friends
could be informed of the sad event. He was thirty-two when he died, a young and brilliant musician.[1]

Della Maria was a mandolin virtuoso, who wrote much for his instrument, and, like his master, Paisiello, made frequent
use of it in his orchestral scores. Several of his church compositions were published by Costallat, Paris, and he left many
unpublished works, consisting of church and instrumental pieces, and mandolin sonatas, which, with his mandolin and
violoncello, were preserved in the home of his parents in Marseilles.[1]

References
1. Philip J. Bone, The Guitar and Mandolin, biographies of celebrated players and composers for these instruments,
London: Schott and Co., 1914. (https://archive.org/details/guitarmandolinbi00bone)

External links
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Domenico_Della-Maria&oldid=875357494"
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This page was last edited on 25 December 2018, at 22:56 (UTC).

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