Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736) achieved very limited success in
his brief lifetime. He died indigent at the age of 26 in a Capuchin
monastery near Naples and was buried in a pauper's grave. Within a few
years of his death, however, with revivals of his works in Rome, Naples,
Dresden and Munich, his reputation soared and his fame spread through
all Europe.
Pergolesi's importance and popularity today rest largely on his operas
and sacred music -- particularly on the Stabat Mater, his last and
what many consider his greatest work. A setting for soprano, alto and
strings of a medieval Latin poem about the sorrows of the Virgin Mary at
Christ's crucifixion, the Stabat Mater is music of transcendent beauty
and poignancy. Long a staple of the repertoire, this Italian Baroque
masterpiece is an essential work for students and performers of choral
music. They, and all lovers of fine music, will welcome this
inexpensive, authoritative edition.