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CAT - Verbal - 3 Sep
CAT - Verbal - 3 Sep
CAT - Verbal - 3 Sep
between 1644 and 1664. Her use of these vocal forms places her directly within the cantata tradition of
the mid-seventeenth century, along with such major figures as Rossi, Carissimi, and Cesti.
With the notable exception of Francesca Caccini (1587 c. 1640), she is the only known woman among
the many aria and cantata composers of seventeenth-century Italy, and is, presumably, among the very
few women of the period to have pursued a career as a composer and to have achieved some measure
of public recognition. This historical distinction attracted attention to her works early in the present
century, even when the music of most of her male contemporaries, and,indeed, most women
composers of any era, remained relatively ignored. But appreciation of her style was limited by pre-
vailing convention to an isolation of its supposedly femi- nine qualities: great spontaneity, exquisite
grace, marvelously fine taste. Such an appreciation now appears irrelevant as well as polemical in its
incompleteness because we are in a better position with regard to both historical knowledge and social
awareness to attempt a more precise evaluation of a somewhat anomalous figure like Barbara Strozzi.
Born in 1619 in Venice, she grew up in the home of Giulio Strozzi, a renowned poet and leading figurem
among Venetian intellectuals. Barbaras presence in Giulios household guaranteed her and early and full
exposure to Venetian musical and literary society. Indeed, she was able to enter a world that was,
apparently, closed to other members of her sex. Similarly, Francesca Caccini, the most prominent and
successful Italian woman composer of the period, was the daughter of professional musicians and
therefore exposed to music for infancy. This parallel suggests that such an environment may have been
essential for the development of a female composer.
But though Strozzis music certainly shares fully the aesthetic aim of her contemporaries, and of the
baroque in general to move the passions - her life and her work distinguishes her form these
contemporaries in various ways. Whereas other composers sought (and found) a public forum for their
effective expression in the theater and the Church, her world remained more private.
Strozzi was a singer in Venice, surrounded by opera librettists and impresarios at a time when opera was
the main cultural interest of a large segment of Venetian society, yet she apparently never sang in
opera, nor did she write an opera. She is not a composer of dramatic works; her songs are addressed to
a more intimate audience, expressing less the feeling of fictive characters than her own: These harmonic
notes, she writes, are the language of the soul, and instruments of the heart.
1. According to the passage, Barbara Strozzi’s music attracted attention early in the twentieth century
because of
A) The author doubts the historical authenticity of the quotation that follows.
D) The author does not believe that Stozzi’s music has the qualities cited in the quotation.
3. With which of the following statements would the author of the passage be most likely to agree?
A) The music of the seventeenth-century Italy is less frequently performed today than it was 50 years
ago.
B) Contemporary music historians no longer discuses the music of a given composer in terms of its
particular individual style.
C) The cantata tradition of seventeenth-century Italy is much better understood today than it ever has
been.
D) Late-twentieth-century music historians have more accurate historical information than their early-
twentieth-century counterparts.
E) Music historians of the early twentieth century were uninterested in the details of social life in
seventeenth-century Venetian musical circles.
4. The author of the passage bases her assertion that Strozzi is one of the very few seventeenth-century
Italian women composers (lines 4-7) on which of the following assumptions?
C) The music of any woman composer whom her seventeenth-century contemporaries regarded as
noteworthy would be known to modern scholars.
D) The cantata tradition of the mid-seventeenth-century includes composers and performers of
madrigals and arias as well as cantatas.
E) More women pursued careers as composers in seventeenth-century Italy than is evident from music
published in the seventeenth-century.
5. The author of the passage implies that which of the following was most essential to the success of
both Francesca Caccini and Barbara Strozzi?
6. It can be inferred from the passage that all of the following made Barbara Strozzi "a somewhat
anomalous figure" (highlighted) EXCEPT:
(A) She was a woman composer during the seven teenth century.
(B) She was intimately involved in Venetian literary and musical society.
7. The author of the passage implies that composers of Italian baroque music typically
(C) aspired to reach large segments of the public with their works
(D) avoided emotional expression in their works
(E) wrote music for solo voices rather than for choral ensembles
8. The author of the passage quotes Barbara Strozzi in the last line most probably in order to
A) What was the exact family relationship between Giulio Strozzi and Barbara Strozzi?
B) What is the evidence that indicates that Barbara Strozzi never sang in an opera?
E) What instruments provide the accompaniment for Barbara Strozzi’s vocal works?