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PAISIELLO (or PAESIELLO), GIOVANNI (1741-1816) , See also: Italian musical composer, was See also: born at Tarento on the 9th of May 1741
.
The beauty of his See also: voice attracted so much See also: attention that in 1754 he was removed from the Jesuit See also: college at Tarento to the Conservatorio di S
.
Onofrio at Naples, where he studied under See also: Durante, and in See also: process of See also: time See also: rose to the position of assistant master
.
For the theatre of the Conservatorio, which he See also: left in 1763, he wrote some intermezzi, one of which attracted so much See also: notice that he was invited to write two operas, La Pupilla and Il Hondo al Rovescio, for Bologna, and a third, Il Marchese di Tulipano, for See also: Rome
.
His reputation being now firmly established, he settled for some years at Naples, where, notwithstanding the popularity of Piccini, See also: Cimarosa and See also: Guglielmi, of whose triumphs he was bitterly jealous, he produced a series of highly successful operas, one of which, L'Idolo cinese, made a deep impression upon the Neapolitan public
.
In 1772 he began to write See also: church
See also: music, and composed a See also: requiem for Gennara Borbone
.
In the same See also: year he married See also: Cecilia Pallini, with whom he lived in continued happiness
.
In 1776 Paisiello was invited by the empress See also: Catherine II. to St See also: Petersburg, where he remained for eight years, producing, among other charming See also: works, his masterpiece, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, which soon attained a See also: European reputation
.
The See also: fate of this delightful See also: opera marks an epoch in the See also: history of Italian See also: art; for with it the gentle suavity cultivated by the masters of the 18th century died out to make See also: room for the dazzling brilliancy of a later See also: period
.
When, in 1816, Rossini set the same libretto to music, under the title of Almaviva, it was hissed from the stage; but it made its way, nevertheless, and under its changed title, Il Barbiere, is now acknowledged as Rossini's greatest See also: work, while Paisiello's opera is consigned to oblivion—a See also: strange instance of poetical vengeance, since Paisiello himself had many years previously endeavoured to eclipse the fame of Pergolesi by resetting the libretto of his famous intermezzo, La Serva padrona
.
Paisiello quitted See also: Russia in 1784, and, after producing Il Re Teodoro at Vienna, entered the service of See also: Ferdinand IV. at Naples, where he composed many of his best operas, including
Nina and La Molinara
.
After many vicissitudes, resulting from
See also: political and dynastic changes, he was invited to See also: Paris .(1802) by See also: Napoleon, whose favour he had won five years previously by a See also: march composed for the funeral of General
See also: Hoche
.
Napoleon treated him munificently, while cruelly neglecting two far greater composers, Cherubini and Maul, to whom the new favourite transferred the hatred he had formerlySee also: borne to Cimarosa, Guglielmi and Piccini
.
Paisiello conducted the music of the See also: court in the Tuileries with a See also: stipend of 1o,000 francs and 4800 for lodging, but he entirely failed to conciliate the Parisian public, who received his opera See also: Proserpine so coldly that, in 1803, he requested and with some difficulty obtained permission to return to See also: Italy, upon the plea of his wife's See also: ill See also: health
.
On his arrival at Naples Paisiello was reinstated in his former appointments by See also: Joseph See also: Bonaparte and See also: Murat, but he had taxed his See also: genius beyond its strength, and was unable to meet the demands now made upon it for new ideas
.
His prospects, too, were See also: precarious
.
The power of the Bonaparte See also: family was tottering to its fall; and Paisiello's fortunes See also: fell with it
.
The See also: death of his wife in 1815 tried him severely
.
His health failed rapidly, and constitutional jealousy of the popularity of others was a source of worry and vexation
.
He died on the 5th of See also: June 1816
.
Paisiello's operas (of which he is known to have composed 94) abound with melodies, the graceful beauty of which is still warmly appreciated
.
Perhaps the best known of these airs is the famous " Nel See also: cor pill " from La Molinaro, immortalized by See also: Beethoven's delightful variations
.
His church music was very voluminous, comprising eight masses, besides many smaller works; he also produced fifty-one instrumental compositions and many detached pieces
.
MS. scores of many of his operas were presented to the library of the See also: British Museum by See also: Dragonetti
.
The library of the Gerolamini at Naples possesses an interesting MS. compilation recording Paisiello's opinions on contemporary composers, and exhibiting him as a somewhat severe critic, especially of the work of Pergolesi . His See also: Life has been written by F
.
Schizze (Milan, 1833)
.
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