“Once a priest always a priest.” White commented, “He was ordained, he was a priest his whole life (and) his spirituality comes out in his music, all you have to do is listen and you’ll hear it.”ĭespite his poor health, he continued to travel around Europe to spread his music, and he was a prolific composer. While the dispensation meant that he was taken away from many of the routine duties of a priest, White believes that his role as a priest remained an essential element of his compositions. It would have been his own decision, a decision of nobody but himself, and he also gave up a good salary.” According to White, “It would have been very hard for Vivaldi to give up saying Mass. The exact nature of his medical condition is unknown, but from his description of the symptoms as “tightness of the chest” and trouble breathing, it is theorized that he had asthma. Unfortunately, due to illness, Vivaldi requested a dispensation from celebrating Mass. Shortly after ordination, he was assigned a post as chaplain and violin master at a local orphanage called the Pio Ospedale della Pieta, or the Devout Hospital of Mercy. After a few years of performing, Vivaldi achieved a mastery of the instrument.Īt the age of 15, Vivaldi began studying for the priesthood, and was ordained 10 years later. His father, a professional violinist, shared his trade with his son and Vivaldi’s early life was spent touring Italy with his father as a duo.
Known in his time as “the red priest,” a name referring to his auburn hair, Vivaldi was born in 1678, in Venice. In an interview with, Micky White, the premier expert on Vivaldi’s life and works, pointed out that the influential composer was also a priest. Just about every Baroque composer tried his hand at sacred music, but for Antonio Vivaldi the laborious work of drawing melodies onto musical bars was part of his vocation. Click to bring God's word to your inbox (1 verse a day)