Description
'Master of Kings', the new album from cellist Guillermo Turina, soprano Eugenia Boix and harpsichordist Tomoko Matsuoka features the music of Giacomo Facco.
The music selected on the CD Giacomo Facco: Master of Kings is a journey through his cantatas and his cello music, exemplifying two stages of the composer's life; works from the years he worked in Italy and works from the time he spent in Spain. The album boasts the world premier recording of a monographic chamber music repertory by an Italian composer who is probably one of the most important and influent composers of the Spanish Baroque era.
The title of the album is translated literally from Uberto Zanolli's Giacomo Facco: Maestro de Reyes, the first major biography on this musician and composer. Giacomo Facco was born on 1676 in the Most Serene Republic of Venice, in the small village of Marsango. The first documentary records of his work are in a series of cantatas, dated 1702, kept in Naples. It is there he may have started working for Antonio Spinola. The Spinola family was part of the high Spanish nobility and Antonio, during the War of the Spanish Succession, was appointed Viceroy of Sicily, where he lived until 1713. Facco also moved there with the marquis' court, and had a period of intense activity, during which he premiered several operas and oratorios, as well as some cantatas.
With the signing of the Treaty of Utrecht, Spain handed over the Viceroyalty of Sicily to de Duke of Savoy and consequently both Spinola and Facco headed for Spain. Facco and was hired by the court in Madrid as master to the Infante Luis, Prince of Asturias, and as a violinist in the Chapel Royal. During his first years there, his reputation as a composer led him to write what many consider the first Italian opera with a libretto in Spanish, 'Amor es todo Invencion', premiered in the Coliseo del Buen Retiro in 1721. Facco stayed in Madrid working for the court of the royal family until his last days, in 1753.