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・ Alfonso Fadrique
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・ Alfonso Feijoo
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・ Alfonso Fernández de Bonilla
・ Alfonso Fernández el Niño
・ Alfonso Ferrabosco
・ Alfonso Ferrabosco III
・ Alfonso Ferrabosco the elder
・ Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger
・ Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora
・ Alfonso Fidalgo
・ Alfonso Flores
・ Alfonso Flórez Ortiz
Alfonso Fontanelli
・ Alfonso Fraga
・ Alfonso Fraile
・ Alfonso Franco
・ Alfonso Frazer
・ Alfonso Freeman
・ Alfonso Fróilaz
・ Alfonso G. Pablo, Sr.
・ Alfonso Gagliano
・ Alfonso Garcia
・ Alfonso García
・ Alfonso García Robles
・ Alfonso Gatto
・ Alfonso Gesualdo
・ Alfonso Giacomo Gaspare Corti


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Alfonso Fontanelli : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfonso Fontanelli
Alfonso Fontanelli (15 February 1557 – 11 February 1622) was an Italian composer, writer, diplomat, courtier, and nobleman of the late Renaissance. He was one of the leading figures in the musically progressive Ferrara school in the late 16th century, and one of the earliest composers in the ''seconda pratica'' style at the transition to the Baroque era.
==Life==
Fontanelli was born in Reggio nell'Emilia, the son of Count Emilio Fontanelli. His early musical education was with composer Gasparo Pratoneri, and he evidently showed a talent for writing as well; a number of his lyric poems survive.
He married for the first time in 1580, and in 1584 began his career as a courtier, statesman, and musician to the Este family in Ferrara. It was in the employ of the Este family that he first went to Rome in 1586; while there he probably met the renowned madrigalist Luca Marenzio, as well as members of the Roman school of composition, aspects of whose style appear in his music. His diplomatic activity while in Rome enhanced his reputation greatly, for in 1588 he received two honors: he was named "music counselor" to the ''Accademia de Parteni'' in Ferrara, and he was made a gentleman of the Ferrara court. He rose steadily in influence between then and its dissolution in 1597, when the ruling Este family was removed to Modena and the region of Ferrara was absorbed into the Papal States.
Fontanelli probably wrote most of his surviving compositions during the 1590s, and immediately after 1600. Not only was he active as a musician at the Ferrara court during the earlier part of this period, but he was active as a diplomat and statesman, traveling to the Gonzaga court in Mantua and the Medici in Florence, and mingling with local musicians in each place. In 1594 he traveled extensively with Carlo Gesualdo, going to Venice, Florence, Naples, and Venosa with the notorious composer and murderer. A correspondence from himself to his patron Alfonso II d'Este survives, containing much information on musical practice of the period.〔Newcomb, Anthony. "Carlo Gesualdo and a musical correspondence of 1594" in ''The Musical Quarterly'', October 1968, vol. LIV no. 4〕 In 1591 Fontanelli's first wife died, and he married again, to Maria Biancoli, a marriage which was to prove troublesome.
After the Este family moved to Modena, Fontanelli followed them there, maintaining his capacity as a diplomat: in 1600 and 1601 he went to Rome and Florence on their behalf. In November 1601, he discovered that his wife had been having an affair, and he murdered her lover (unlike Gesualdo, who in similar circumstances murdered them both, Fontanelli spared his wife); as a punishment he was stripped of his possessions and banished from the Este lands. He found refuge with the opulent Roman household of Cardinal Alessandro d’Este, the younger brother of Duke Cesare who had banished him from Modena, and continued his musical life in Rome. By 1605 he had repaired his ties with Duke Cesare, and became the official representative of the Este family in Rome. Whether he repented of the murder, or was retained because of his exceptional skill as a diplomat, is not known.
During the next ten years he traveled widely, including a stay in Florence to try to mediate conflicts among the Medici court musicians, and a sojourn in Spain in 1611 and 1612 as the Este representative. By 1615 he evidently had settled in Rome, becoming prominent in the musical life there; however no works of his from these years seem to have survived. Many surviving letters between members of the Roman aristocracy and church hierarchy however survive, giving many details of the musical life there, and Fontanelli's prominent position within it. Fontanelli became a priest in 1621, and died in early 1622 from an insect bite while in the Oratorio della Chiesa Nuova.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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