Giovanni Battista Doni Explained

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Birth Place:Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
Death Place:Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany

Giovanni Battista Doni (bap. 13 March 1595 – 1647) was an Italian musicologist and humanist who made an extensive study of ancient music. He is known, among other works, for having renamed the note "Ut" to "Do" in solfège.

In his day, he was a well-known lawyer, classical scholar, critic and musical theorist, and from 1640 to 1647 he occupied the Chair of Eloquence at the University of Florence and was a prominent member of the city's Accademia della Crusca, the premier academic philologic society of Florence and Italy at the time. They had published the first Italian-language dictionary and grammar in 1612.

Life

Born in Florence, he studied Greek, rhetoric, poetry and philosophy at the Universities of Florence and Bologna and both mathematics and jurisprudence at the University of Rome. Later he studied jurisprudence at Bourges in France and it is claimed that he worked for some time with the famous legal scholar Jacques Cujas who was a prominent member of the legal humanists or mos gallicus school (a French approach to historical law studies). However, since Cujas died a few years before Giovanni Doni's birth, this seems to be unlikely; however he probably did study under the legal humanists as the University of Bourges. (See also Cujas Library)

This approach to legal studies was admired during the early French revolutionary period because it emphasised the importance of early Roman law, rather than the pretensions of French kings.[1]

Corsini family

Doni received the degree of doctor from the University of Pisa and was chosen to accompany Neri Corsini (1614-1678) to Paris in 1621 where he became acquainted with Marin Mersenne and other literary persons. The Florentine Corsini family became important contacts in Doni's life: Neri Corsini became a cardinal in 1664 (not to be confused with Neri Maria Corsini, who became a cardinal in 1730). This was a period where the top religious orders were part of a culture of nepotism, and Doni attached himself to these religious dynasties.

Barberini family

On returning to Florence in 1622, Doni entered the service of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, and moved with him to Rome where Barberini became Dean of the College of Cardinals. Barberini was the elder brother of Cardinal Antonio Barberini, and the nephew of Maffeo Barberini who became Pope Urban VIII. He had studied at the University of Pisa where he was assisted by the family friend Galileo Galilei. Later in 1633 Barberini served with the Inquisition tribunal investigating Galileo, but was one of three members of the tribunal who refused to condemn Galileo.

Doni later accompanied the cardinal who was a special legate sent to Cardinal Richelieu to Paris, and then in 1625 to Madrid (papal legate), and back to Rome (1626). Doni made good use of the opportunities that arose from these journeys to acquire substantial knowledge of ancient music. Among other things, he either invented or reconstructed, a double lyre which, in honour of his patron, he called a Lyra Barberina or Amphichord (see barbiton).

Opera in Florence

Giovanni returned to Florence once again (around 1640), where he married and settled down as professor at the university where he continued his studies of ancient music and music theory. Opera had been invented in Florence, and Vincenzo Galilei, the father of Galileo, was a key member of the group which established the new approach to theatre, and also an experimenter with acoustic laws and harmonies. Under guidance from Doni, Cardinal Barberini was encouraged to venture into the production of an ancient version of opera.

He died only seven years after returning for Florence. Doni's main contribution to the world of letters was the study of classic musical theory as it existed in antiquity. Between 1635 and 1639 he wrote a Treatise on Music for the Theatre which provides important history details for early opera.[2]

Solfège

In the eleventh century, the music theorist Guido of Arezzo developed a six-note ascending scale that went as follows: ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la. Giovanni Battista Doni named the "Aretinian syllables" after him. The names were taken from the first verse of the Latin hymn Ut queant laxis, where the syllables fall on their corresponding scale degree. This system later came to be known as solfège.

Giovanni Doni is known for having changed the name of the note "Ut" to "Do".[3] He convinced his contemporaries to make the change by arguing that "Do" is easier to pronounce than "Ut," and that "Do" is an abbreviation for "Dominus." the Latin word for The Lord, who is the tonic and root of the world. There is much academic speculation that Giovanni Doni also wanted to imprint himself into musical canon in perpetuity because "Do" is also ulteriorly an abbreviation for his surname.

A seventh note, "Si" (from the initials for "Sancte Iohannes", Latin vocative for “St. John the Baptist”) was added shortly after to complete the diatonic scale.[4] In Anglophone countries, "Si" was changed to "Ti" by Sarah Glover in the nineteenth century so that every syllable might begin with a different letter.[5] "Ti" is used in tonic sol-fa and in the song "Do-Re-Mi".

Works

Bibliography

References

The Cambridge History of Seventeenth Century Music, ed., Tim Carter and John Butt, (Cambridge University Press, 2005).

Notes and References

  1. Ogilvie, Brian W. The Science of Describing: Natural History in Renaissance Europe https://books.google.com/books?id=f8FmrXT1jdIC
  2. MacClinock, Carol Readings in the History of Music in Performance (1979) https://books.google.com/books?id=r0dm_fXNl0sC
  3. McNaught . W. G. . 1893 . The History and Uses of the Sol-fa Syllables . Proceedings of the Musical Association . 19 . 35–51 . Novello, Ewer and Co. . London . 10.1093/jrma/19.1.35 . 0958-8442 . 2010-02-26.
  4. Davies, Norman (1997), Europe, pp.271-2
  5. This also freed up Si for later use as Sol-sharp
  6. Book: Sandys, Sir John Edwin. A History of Classical Scholarship: From the revival of learning to the end of the eighteenth century (in Italy, France, England, and the Netherlands). Cambridge University Press. 1908. Cambridge. 279. John Edwin Sandys.