Filippo Rosa
Filippo Rosa
Genres: italian, 18th century
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About Filippo Rosa
Filippo Rosa is best treated, on currently accessible evidence, as a composer-name attached to a very small body of mid-eighteenth-century recorder/flute repertory, with almost no recoverable personal biography. Modern scholarly discussion of the Neapolitan recorder tradition explicitly states that nothing is known of him, and even the commonly repeated association with Naples cannot be confirmed from the open evidence base used here. His name persists primarily because one or more attractive chamber pieces for treble instrument and basso continuo were copied, preserved, and later revived in modern performance and recording culture. The work most consistently linked to him in present-day cataloguing and performance metadata is a four-movement piece in F major often described as a Recorder Sonata but also transmitted under the older genre term “Sinfonia a Flauto Solo e Basso.” It circulates today in editions and recordings and is tied, at least in the modern editorial marketplace, to a manuscript context in Parma: the Biblioteca Palatina manuscript CF-V-23, associated with Paolo Parensi as copyist and containing a mixed anthology of recorder repertory. Because the surviving footprint is so heavily dependent on anthology transmission and later editorial choices, the responsible biographical conclusion is deliberately narrow: “Filippo Rosa” is an eighteenth-century attribution name (often dated around fl. 1750 in lightweight reference stubs) whose secure historical reality, places of activity, and broader oeuvre remain unestablished in the readily consultable record, even while a small number of pieces under that name continue to circulate and be performed.
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