Alessandro Marcello Tickets | 2025-2026 Tour & Event Dates | GoComGo.com

Alessandro Marcello Tickets

Composer
Filter
Types
Theatres

Events6 results

Filter By
Modern Ballet
Save4%
29 May 2025, Thu
Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven , Alessandro Marcello , Antonio Vivaldi , Dirk Haubrich , Giovanni Battista Pergolesi , Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber , Johann Sebastian Bach , John Cage , Lukas Foss , Philip Glass
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet
Modern Ballet
Save4%
2 Jun 2025, Mon
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet
Modern Ballet
Save4%
5 Jun 2025, Thu
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet
Modern Ballet
Save5%
12 Jun 2025, Thu
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet
View Tickets from 113 US$

Latest booking: 5 minutes ago

Modern Ballet
Save5%
13 Jun 2025, Fri
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet
View Tickets from 113 US$

25 people looking at this moment

Modern Ballet
Save5%
14 Jun 2025, Sat
Cast: Norwegian National Ballet

About

Alessandro Ignazio Marcello (Italian: [marˈtʃɛllo]; 1 February 1673[1] – 19 June 1747[2] in Venice) was an Italian nobleman and composer.

Born in Venice, Marcello was the son of a senator. As such, he enjoyed a comfortable life that gave him the scope to pursue his interest in music. He was a contemporary of Tomaso Albinoni. He held concerts in his hometown and also composed and published several sets of concertos, including six concertos under the title of La Cetra (The Lyre), as well as cantatas, arias, canzonets, and violin sonatas. Marcello, being a slightly older contemporary of Antonio Vivaldi, often composed under the pseudonym Eterio Stinfalico, his name as a member of the celebrated Arcadian Academy (Pontificia Accademia degli Arcadi). He died in Padua in 1747.

Alessandro's brother was the more well-known Benedetto Marcello, also a composer, who illegally married his singing student Rosanna Scalfi in 1728. After his death she was unable to inherit his estate, and in 1742 she filed suit against Alessandro Marcello, seeking financial support.

Works
Although most of his works are infrequently performed today, Marcello is regarded as a very competent composer. His La Cetra concertos are "unusual for their wind solo parts, concision and use of counterpoint within a broadly Vivaldian style," according to Grove, "placing them as a last outpost of the classic Venetian Baroque concerto."[citation needed]

The Concerto for Oboe and Strings in D minor op. 1 is perhaps his best-known work. Its worth was affirmed by Johann Sebastian Bach who transcribed it for harpsichord(BWV974). A number of editions have been published, including an edition in C minor because the baroque oboe played a whole tone lower than the modern oboe.

You are here
Top of page