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New Masterclass, Luigi Boccherini, Minuet

New Masterclass, Luigi Boccherini, Minuet

Boccherini Tutorial Video 1/7

Renato Bellucci Teaches Luigi Boccherini's Minuet for guitar. The opening section of this Minuet is perhaps one of the best known melodies of all times. It is also true that everybody knows the first 2 sections of the work but the mid section is unknown and quite justly so. As a good friend and musician used to say "Some pieces last way passed the end". This is one of those. I decided to omit the mid section completely and you can feel free to repeat the opening sections as many times as you like. 
Boccherini was born in Lucca, Italy, into a musical family. His father, a cellist and double-bass player, sent him to study in Rome at a young age. In 1757 they both went to Vienna, where the court employed them as musicians in the Burgtheater. In 1761 Boccherini went to Madrid, entering in 1770 the employ of Infante Luis Antonio of Spain (1727–1785), younger brother of King Charles III of Spain. There he flourished under royal patronage, until one day when the King expressed his disapproval at a passage in a new trio, and ordered Boccherini to change it. The composer, no doubt irritated with this intrusion into his art, doubled the passage instead, which led to his immediate dismissal. Then he accompanied Don Luis (the Infante) to Arenas de San Pedro, a little town in the Gredos Mountains; there and in the nearest town of Candeleda Boccherini wrote many of his most famous works. Later patrons included the French ambassador to Spain, Lucien Bonaparte (1775–1840), as well as King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744–1797), himself an amateur cellist, flautist, and avid supporter of the arts. Boccherini fell on hard times following the deaths of his Spanish patron (1785), his two wives (1785 and 1805), and his four daughters (1796, 1802 and 1804). He died in Madrid in 1805, survived by two sons. His bloodline continues to this day in Spain.[4] His body lay buried in the Pontifical Basilica of St. Michael in Madrid until 1927, when Benito Mussolini[citation needed] had his remains repatriated and buried in the church of San Francesco in his native Lucca. Visit the Masterclass HERE>>