Francesco Gasparini
0 sources
Francesco Gasparini
Summary
Francesco Gasparini is a human[1]. His place of birth was Camaiore[2]. He was born on March 19, 1668[3]. He passed away in Rome[4]. He died on February 22, 1727[5]. He worked as a composer[6], conductor[7], musicologist[8], music theorist[9], and music director[10]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (77 views/month, #7,289 of 1,000,298).[11]
Key Facts
- Born in Camaiore[2], Francesco Gasparini…
- Francesco Gasparini passed away in Rome[4].
- Francesco Gasparini was born on March 19, 1668[3].
- Francesco Gasparini was born on 1661[12].
- Francesco Gasparini was born on 1665[13].
- Francesco Gasparini was born on 1668[14].
- Francesco Gasparini died on February 22, 1727[5].
- Francesco Gasparini died on March 22, 1727[15].
- Francesco Gasparini died on April 1737[16].
- Francesco Gasparini's professions included composer[6].
- Francesco Gasparini worked as a conductor[7].
- Francesco Gasparini worked as a musicologist[8].
- Francesco Gasparini's professions included music theorist[9].
- Francesco Gasparini worked as a music director[10].
- A notable student of Francesco Gasparini was Benedetto Marcello[17].
- A notable student of Francesco Gasparini was Domenico Scarlatti[18].
- A notable student of Francesco Gasparini was Johann Joachim Quantz[19].
- Francesco Gasparini is recorded as male[20].
- Francesco Gasparini's instance of is recorded as human[21].
- Francesco Gasparini is associated with the Baroque music movement[22].
- Francesco Gasparini's genre is opera[23].
- Francesco Gasparini's Commons category is recorded as Francesco Gasparini[24].
- Francesco Gasparini's family name is recorded as Gasparini[25].
- Francesco Gasparini's given name is recorded as Francesco[26].
- Francesco Gasparini studied under Bernardo Pasquini[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
-
Type: Person[28]
-
Country: IT[29]
-
Began / founded: 1661-03-19[30]
-
Ended / dissolved: 1727-02-22[31]
-
Genre(s): classical[32]
-
Community tags: classical, composer, italian composer[33]
-
MusicBrainz ID: a630bb61-a93c-48e0-988c-4df2991d3daa[34]
Body
Origins and Family
Born in Camaiore[2], Francesco Gasparini… Recorded date of birth include March 19, 1668[3], 1661[12], 1665[13], and 1668[14].
Education
Studied under Bernardo Pasquini[27], an organist[35], 1637–1710[36]; Antonio Lotti[37], a composer[38], 1667–1740[39], of Republic of Venice[40]; Giovanni Legrenzi[41], a composer[42], 1626–1690[43], of Republic of Venice[44]; and Arcangelo Corelli[45], a composer[46], 1653–1713[47], of Papal States[48].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include composer[6], conductor[7], musicologist[8], music theorist[9], and music director[10]. Notable students include Benedetto Marcello[17], a composer[49], 1686–1739[50], of Republic of Venice[51], specialised in chamber music[52]; Domenico Scarlatti[18], a composer[53], 1685–1757[54], of Kingdom of Spain[55], awarded the Knight of the Military Order of Saint James of the Sword[56], specialised in sonata[57]; and Johann Joachim Quantz[19], a composer[58], 1697–1773[59], of Germany[60].
Death and Burial
Recorded date of death include February 22, 1727[5], March 22, 1727[15], and April 1737[16]. Francesco Gasparini passed away in Rome[4].
Why It Matters
Francesco Gasparini ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (77 views/month, #7,289 of 1,000,298).[11] He has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[61] He is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[62]
FAQs
Where was Francesco Gasparini born?
Francesco Gasparini's place of birth was Camaiore[2].
Where did Francesco Gasparini die?
Francesco Gasparini passed away in Rome[4].
What did Francesco Gasparini do for work?
Francesco Gasparini worked as composer[6], conductor[7], musicologist[8], music theorist[9], and music director[10].