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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 08 Ago 2025 12:22 
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Francesco Masciangelo [1823-1906] Nacque a Lanciano da Teresa Sanese, originaria dell’isola di Malta, e Raffaele Masciangelo violoncellista formatosi a Napoli e poi divenuto musicista della Cappella Musicale della Santa Casa del Ponte di Lanciano. Francesco Masciangelo studiò musica sotto la guida del concittadino Carmine De Giorgio e poi con Camillo Bruschelli che era stato, tra l’altro, maestro di cappella della cattedrale di Lanciano e di Teramo. Ammesso al Real Collegio di Napoli con “piazza franca”, ossia gratuitamente, nel 1840, ebbe come insegnanti Gennaro Parisi per il contrabbasso, Francesco Ruggi per il contrappunto e lo stesso Saverio Mercadante che ebbe verso il ragazzo un rapporto di stima ed affetto, tanto da annoverarlo tra i suoi migliori allievi. Diplomatosi nel 1845, ottenne il posto di organista della cattedrale di Lanciano e dal 1850 anche quello di maestro di cappella. Da quel momento in poi egli mantenne ininterrottamente per circa sessant’anni il ruolo di responsabile di quella che era ritenuta la principale istituzione musicale della città. Compositore prolifico, scrisse 590 composizioni in tutti i generi: opere teatrali, composizioni vocali profane, composizioni strumentali, musiche di scena, esercizi scolastici e opere didattiche e musica sacra.

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La Sunamitide ovvero il trionfo della bellezza e della virtú, melodrama sacro en dos actos [1874]. Fragmento.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 15 Ago 2025 10:56 
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Jean-Benjamin François de La Borde [1734-1794]. He was born in Paris into an aristocratic family, he studied the violin with Dauvergne and composition with Rameau and made a successful début as a stage composer at the age of 14. He entered Louis XV’s service in 1762 and during the next 12 years acquired the title of premier valet du chambre and worked primarily as a composer. The majority of his stage works are opéras comiques, but he also wrote pastoral operas, such as Annette et Lubin, La meunière de Gentilly and La cinquantaine. Their short airs, hardly allowing the singers time to express any sentiment, are mostly composed in regular periods, with a string and basso continuo accompaniment, resembling the ariettes or chansons that La Borde published separately in collections with great success. The pastorales convey less a sense of drama than an agreeable lyrical atmosphere. La Borde’s best work is possibly the concisely written, lively Gilles, garçon peintre, z’amoureux-t-et-rival, a parody of Duni’s Le peintre amoureux de son modèle; it is characterized by irregular rhythms, continuous dynamic changes, ensembles and unaccompanied airs. He also composed tragédies lyriques that bear witness to his close relationship with Rameau, and he revised operas by Lully and Collasse, documenting his interest in updating the ‘classics’ of French opera. According to Lajarte, Ismène and Amadis enjoyed 23 performances and La cinquantaine 26 [although the Mercure de France reports that the audience whistled at its première]. Some of his operas were performed only privately. Grimm was openly hostile towards him: after the première of Les amours de Gonesse he called him a ‘barbouilleur de notes infatigable’ [see Tourneux, vi, 302]; he frequently found La Borde’s music lacking in ‘goût’ and ‘génie’ [viii, 200; ix, 237; xi, 162], and labelled him an ‘amateur’ [vii, 457].

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Ismène et Isménias ou La fête de Jupiter, tragédie en musique en tres actos [1763]. Air: Pourquoi cruel amour.

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Thétis et Pélée, tragédie en musique en tres actos [1765]. Air: Ciel! en voyant ce temple redoutable.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 23 Ago 2025 15:40 
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William Todd [*1970] He was born in County Durham, attended Durham School and joined the choir of St Oswald's Church, Durham under its choirmaster David Higgins. He went on to study music at the University of Bristol. He is a pianist and regularly performs with his trio, and this played a large role in one of his best-known works, his Mass in Blue. Mass in Blue [originally entitled Jazz Mass] was commissioned by Hertfordshire Chorus and first performed at the Cambridge Corn Exchange in July 2003 with Will Todd at the piano. Todd's wife, Bethany Halliday, performed the soprano solo alongside the Blue Planet Orchestra and Hertfordshire Chorus, conducted by David Temple. His work The Blackened Man won second prize in the International Verdi Opera Competition in 2002 and was later staged at the 2004 Buxton Festival. The Screams of Kitty Genovese, a piece of music theatre, has been produced at the Boston Conservatory and New York Musical Theatre Festival. His oratorio Saint Cuthbert, with a libretto by Ben Dunwell based on the life of the saint, has been performed and recorded by the Hallé Orchestra and Choir under Christopher Austin. Among Angels was commissioned by the Genesis Foundation and was first performed by The Sixteen in Salzburg. Written for WNO Max, Sweetness and Badness was performed on a tour during autumn 2006. Whirlwind, commissioned by Streetwise Opera, was first performed at The Sage Gateshead.

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Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,a family opera [2013]. Nice Weather for Rabbits.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 29 Ago 2025 13:26 
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Carlo Pallavicino [c1640-1688] He was born in Salò. By 1665 he was organist at the basilica of S Antonio, Padua. Towards the end of 1666 he moved to Dresden, where he served under Johann Georg II, Elector of Saxony, as vice-Kapellmeister, replacing Heinrich Schütz on his death in 1672 as Kapellmeister. From June 1673, he again served as organist at S Antonio in Padua, but moved to Venice one year later, where he served as maestro di coro [1674–1685] at the Ospedale degli Incurabili. During Carnival 1685, Johann Georg III, the son of Pallavicino’s earlier employer, visited Venice and offered him the position of camerae ac teatralis musicae praefectus. Sources indicate that Pallavicino did not leave for Dresden until the beginning of 1687. In August and September of that year, he again visited Venice and then returned to Dresden; he was reportedly about to return to Venice, to supervise the Ospedale degli Incurabili, when he died.

Pallavicino’s first operatic productions in Venice, Demetrio and Aureliano, were for the small Teatro S Moisè in 1666, before his first departure for Dresden. His association with theatres owned by the Grimani brothers began with his third opera, Il tiranno humiliato d’amore, written for the Teatro di SS Giovanni e Paolo and produced in his absence in 1667. After his return in 1673, he contributed to this theatre on a regular basis, and in 1678, when the Grimanis opened the Teatro Grimani a S Giovanni Grisostomo, the most luxurious Venetian opera house of their day, Pallavicino received the commission for the inaugural opera, Vespasiano, an emblematic choice since Vespasian, the founder of the Colosseum, was a touchstone for regal theatricality. During the next two decades, Vespasiano was often restaged for the opening of theatres; Pallavicino may have supervised the Genoese production at the Teatro del Falcone in 1680, since he signed the dedication of the libretto. In 1679 Pallavicino’s Le amazoni nell’isole fortunate inaugurated the private theatre of the Procurator Marco Contarini in Piazzola, where Domenico Freschi later became house composer; the Mercure galant [December 1679 and February 1680] provides a description and an engraving of this work. For Carnival 1680 he also provided an opera, Messalina, for the Teatro S Salvador, where Sartorio was house composer.

After becoming the house composer of the S Giovanni Grisostomo, Pallavicino monopolized seven seasons and provided ten scores during the first ten years. He also continued to write for the SS Giovanni e Paolo. His operas focus on the rapid interaction of characters engaged in lively stage action, and several involve a great deal of spectacle, particularly those for the S Giovanni Grisostomo. Along with Legrenzi and Sartorio, Pallavicino created a style that responded to the audience’s insatiable desire for tunefully ingratiating pieces. Their operas are packed with many short arias and recitative is minimal. The arias usually comprise two strophes in da capo form: settings often establish a constant rhythmic and motivic background against which Pallavicino highlighted certain details with word-painting or melismas. The declamatory pattern of the voice and the accompaniment is usually the same. Motto arias are frequent. Recitatives and the vast majority of arias are supported by continuo alone. Upper melodic instruments are used in a strictly compartmentalized manner in arias, mostly in homorhythmic ritornellos after the singer has concluded, thereby prolonging the mood of the aria and covering the singer’s exit. Less often, ritornellos precede rather than follow the aria. When upper melodic instruments actually accompany an aria they nearly always alternate with the voice, anticipating and echoing vocal phrases and joining the voice only to add weight to the closing vocal phrase. The use of instruments simultaneously with the voice is limited to certain well-defined situations that invoke a shadowy atmosphere, such as oncoming sleep, foreboding, night and incantation. Pallavicino usually called for five-part strings [two violins, two violette and cello] with basso continuo [at least two harpsichords, as well as lutes and several theorbos]. Certain scores call for one or two trumpets.

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Vespasiano, dramma per musica [1680]. Aria: È pur caro il poter dire. https://voca.ro/1jtV7otVxg6M

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L'Antiope, ópera [1689]. Aria:Vieni, corri, volami in braccio. https://voca.ro/19QvYjiiwB8f

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 29 Ago 2025 13:29 
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Si pongo la dirección del enlace entre los comandos [url][/url] me dice:

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No ha quedado mas remedio que ponerlo después del nombre del aria y se ve muy mal. Tampoco me deja poner () y por eso tengo que utilizar [].

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 05 Sep 2025 11:17 
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Salvador Brotons i Soler [*1959] Nació en Barcelona. Estudió flauta con su padre, y realizó los estudios musicales en el Conservatorio de Música de Barcelona consiguiendo los títulos superiores de flauta, composición y dirección de orquesta. Sus maestros fueron Antoni Ros-Marbà, Xavier Montsalvatge y Manuel Oltra. Fue primer flauta de la Orquesta del Gran Teatro del Liceo [1977-1985] y de la Orquesta Ciudad de Barcelona [1981-1985]. El año 1983 recibió el premio Ciudad de Barcelona por la primera de sus sinfonías. Ha escrito otra sinfonía, Resplendor, un cuarteto, una sonata para viola y otras piezas de cámara. En 1987 fue nombrado director de la orquesta de la universidad de Portland, en Estados Unidos, donde residió hasta 1997. Ha sido asistente de la orquesta sinfónica de la Florida State University [1986-1987], director titular de la Oregon Sinfonietta [1990-1993], de la Mittleman Jewish Community Orchestra [1989-1991], y de la orquesta de la Portland State University [1987-1997], universidad dónde también enseñó contrapunto, dirección de orquesta, literatura, e historia de la música. Desde el año 1991, es director titular de la Vancouver Symphony Orchestra [EE. UU.] al frente de la cual ha sido distinguido con el premio "Arts Council" otorgado por el Clark County y la ciudad de Vancouver. En España ha sido el director titular de la Orquesta Sinfónica del Vallés [1998-2002] y de la Orquesta Sinfónica de las Islas Baleares [1998-2001]. También ejerce de profesor de dirección de orquesta y composición en la Escuela Superior de Música de Cataluña [ESMUC].

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Abans del Silenci, zarzuela en dos actos [1998]. Fragmento.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 12 Sep 2025 17:56 
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Stepan Ivanovich Davïdov [1777-1825] He was born in Chernihiv in the Russian Empire [present-day Ukraine]. From 1786 he was a member of the St Petersburg court chapel choir and at the age of 18 began studying with Giuseppi Sarti. In 1797 he succeeded Bortnyansky as conductor of the chapel choir at St Petersburg, a position he held for three years. In 1800 he succeeded Fomin at the imperial theatre school; there he taught singing, acted as répétiteur and was required to compose music for stage productions. Due to ill health he left in 1804, but he was reappointed in 1806 and remained associated with the school until 1810. He then moved to Moscow; in 1815 he was musical director to Count D.N. Sheremet'yev’s private theatre on his estate, Ostankino, near Moscow, and later taught singing at the Moscow Drama School.

Davïdov was one of the most important opera composers in Russia during the early years of the 19th century, and is now remembered principally for his contributions to a Russian adaptation of Kauer’s highly successful Singspiel Das Donauweibchen. Kauer’s own music, with six additional numbers by Davïdov, was used for part 1 of the adaptation, entitled Rusalka and given in St Petersburg in 1803 with a Russian libretto recast from the original German by N.S. Krasnopol'sky. A second part, first performed in 1804, also uses Kauer’s score, with some additions by Catterino Cavos. For parts 3 and 4 Davïdov composed new music: part 3, entitled Lesta, Dneprovskaya rusalka [‘Lesta, the Dnepr Water-Nymph’], was performed in St Petersburg in 1805, and the final part [Rusalka] appeared two years later. In his music for the opera Davïdov made substantial use of folk melodies and imbued his score with a distinctive Russian character. It was immediately successful, and remained popular for many years; part 4 was revived during the 1850s.

Davïdov devoted much of his time to writing for the stage, although he composed only two full-scale operas. He also composed church music, including a setting of the liturgy and 13 vocal concertos. Much of this music appears to date from Davïdov’s period of attachment to the court chapel choir in St Petersburg. Two early ballets, Uvenchannaya blagost' [‘Virtue Crowned’, 1801] and Zhertvoprinosheniye blagodarnosti [‘Thank Offering’, 1802], were both choreographed by Walberg and probably formed part of the official celebrations for the accession of Aleksandr I. Davïdov also composed incidental music, principally for neo-classical tragedies, and in 1817 wrote a cantata, Apollon u Admeta [‘Apollo with Admetus’]. Besides one other ballet, Torzhestvo pobedï [‘The Victory Celebration’, 1814 or 1815], Davïdov concentrated on composing comical divertissements during the last ten years of his life. Of these there are five examples, based on subjects of Russian folklore and containing many folk melodies. In 1826 Glinka wrote a set of five variations for piano based on Davïdov’s song Sredi dolinï rovnïye [‘In the midst of the gentle Valleys’].

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Lesta, the Dnyepr Water-Nymph, ópera cómica en tres actos [1805]. Fragmento.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 19 Sep 2025 15:31 
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Pietro Chiarini [ca. 1717– 1765] He was born in Brescia. Chiarini was remembered by La Borde [1780] as a ‘professeur habile & bon joueur de clavecin’, an estimate paraphrased by Gerber [1790] and others. His activity as an opera composer is attested by the surviving librettos of works produced at Venice, Verona and Genoa from 1738 to 1746. A solitary libretto of 1754 places him at Cremona, as does the title of a keyboard sonata published by Haffner in 1765; the latter, in G major, reveals him as a lesser contemporary of Galuppi. Chiarini's collaboration with Goldoni, 1741–1742, was first elucidated by Ortolani in his edition of Goldoni's complete works; Walker's further researches into the tangled history of the intermezzo Il finto pazzo and its later version Amor fa l'uomo cieco succeeded in establishing Chiarini's share in their music. On the basis of a manuscript in the library of the Paris Conservatoire, Walker also concluded that Il geloso schernito, previously ascribed to Pergolesi [and published as such in the composer's complete works], was in fact by Chiarini; and there can be no doubt that this is music of a later vintage, and of less importance, than Pergolesi's.

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Il geloso schernito, commedia musicale in tre parti [1746]. Aria: Son tutto in tempesta. Duo: Signor padroncino, si faccia più in là.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 26 Sep 2025 9:23 
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Henri Sauguet [1901-1989] Born in Bordeaux as Henri-Pierre Poupard, he adopted his mother's maiden name as his pseudonym. Sauguet started learning the piano at home when he was five years old. Later he was taught by the organist of the church of Sainte-Eulalie de Bordeaux. On the mobilization of his father in 1914, he was required to earn a living at a very young age. Eventually employed by the Prefecture of Montauban in 1919–1920, he formed a friendship with Joseph Canteloube, a former pupil of Vincent d'Indy. Together they collected and harmonized traditional songs under the title Chants d'Auvergne [Songs of Auvergne]. During this period too he continued his musical education with local organists and himself served as organist at the small church of St-Vincent de Floirac just outside the city [1916–1922]. Sacred music, and especially organ arrangements, were to influence him for the rest of his life. One may instance the pieces he later wrote for organ and various combinations of instruments: Oraisons, with four saxophones [1976]; Ne moriatur in aeternum, with trumpet [1979]; Church Sonata, with string quintet [1985]. When Henri Collet dubbed a group of Paris-based composers Les Six, Sauguet started writing to one of its members, Darius Milhaud. He also began to refer to himself and two Bordeaux friends, Louis Emié and Jean-Marcel Lizotte [another composer and a poet-musician], as 'Les Trois'. Their first concert took place on 12 December 1920. This included performances of works by 'Les Six' [Georges Auric, Louis Durey, Arthur Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, Darius Milhaud and Francis Poulenc], together with "Erik Satie et la jeune musique française". Among compositions by all three local exponents of 'the young French music' were Sauguet's four-handed Danse nègre and his Pastorale pour piano.

Sauguet's correspondence with Milhaud led to the composer asking to see some of his works. He wrote a piano suite called Trois Françaises [Three Frenchwomen] which so impressed Milhaud that he encouraged the young man to move to Paris. Arriving in October 1921, he found work as a secretary at the Guimet Museum. For some six years he studied composition with Charles Koechlin, whom he credits with helping him understand music within its own context and find his own voice. In 1923, together with three other admirers of Satie's music [Henri Clicquot-Pleyell, Roger Désormière, Maxime Jacob], Sauguet formed the 'School of Arcueil', named after the location of Satie's home. With his support, they had their first concert on 25 October 1923 at Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. In 1924 Erik Satie introduced Sauguet to Serge Diaghilev, the flamboyant impresario of the Ballets Russes, and he wrote his first ballet, Les Roses [Roses] that year. In 1927 Diaghilev's company produced the ballet La Chatte [The Cat] with music by Sauguet, which premiered in Monte Carlo on April 30. The story is about a young man who falls in love with a cat, which assumes a human form through the intervention of Aphrodite. As they make love, the cat-woman sees a mouse and cannot resist chasing it, whereupon she changes back into a cat. The work was choreographed by the young George Balanchine.

Sauguet gained his greatest popularity with his ballets, of which he wrote over twenty. The best of these, and the work by which he is most known outside France, was Les Forains [1945] about a talented, slightly tattered, but ultimately hopeful travelling circus troupe. He also wrote numerous works for radio, television, stage, and film, and a large quantity of chamber and other instrumental works, including solos for harmonica and musical saw, but his particular talent was vocal music. He worked ten years on La chartreuse de Parme [The Charterhouse of Parma, 1936] - based on Stendhal's novel - an opera that had a reputation in France as his most important work. Internationally, however, it was considered to be short on emotion and drama. Other operatic works include La Contrebasse [1930], La Gageure Imprévue [1942], Les Caprices de Marianne [1954] and Boule de Suif [1978]. The war period brought a change to Sauguet's work, which had previously been marked by his high spirits. He used his reputation during this time to help his Jewish friends but lost the oldest-established among them, Max Jacob, who died in the Drancy internment camp. At the war's end he completed his Symphony No. 1, known as Expiatoire [Expiatory], in tribute to the war's innocent victims. This was followed by his 2nd Symphony, known as The Allegorical or The Seasons, in 1949. His 3rd Symphony is known as I.N.R. and his 4th, a meditation on old age written as he approached the age of seventy, as Du Troisième Age [The Third Age]. In 1945 he contributed incidental music to the premiere of La Folle de Chaillot, by Jean Giraudoux. Sauguet worked as a music critic throughout the 1930s and 1940s. He founded the Composers Union, also devoting his time to Una Voce, an organization that works to preserve Latin and traditional chant in the Roman Catholic liturgy.

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Les Caprices de Marianne, ópera cómica en dos actos [1954]. Fragmento.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 26 Sep 2025 10:22 
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Zelenka, has oído hablar de un compositor francés llamado Baptiste Trotignon?

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 26 Sep 2025 10:51 
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No, pero por lo que estoy escuchando en el tubo es un neo de cuidado. :?

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 26 Sep 2025 11:30 
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Ayer escuché en vivo cuatro piezas suyas para cuarteto de cuerdas. Nació en 1974 y es, además de compositor, un renombrado pianista de jazz. Lo de si es neo o no lo dejo a su criterio; las piezas eran todas tonales y sonaban muy bien (quizá demasiado bien, ya me entiende), pero no estaba seguro de si eran o no "neo". Por eso pensé en preguntarle. No estaría de más que me lo confirmara...Un saludo.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 26 Sep 2025 15:21 
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Te lo confirmo, es un neo.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 03 Oct 2025 8:33 
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Santo Lapis [ca. 1699- ca.1765] He was baptized in Bologna. According to archival documents [I-Baf, Bas] he studied in Bologna at the S Onofrio conservatory and in 1720 was admitted to the Accademia Filarmonica as an organist. He probably left Bologna after 1724. He wrote the first two acts of the three-act dramma, La generosità di Tiberio [the third act was by Cordans] to a libretto by Minato, performed at the Teatro S Cassiano, Venice, in autumn 1729; and he partly reset Francesco Gasparini’s L’amor generoso as La fede in cimento, performed during Carnival 1730, again at the S Cassiano. In 1732 he composed a cantata, Le nozze di Psiche e Cupido, for a celebration at S Marco. In 1739 he may have been in Prague, where part of the music for a production of Ginevra [libretto by Antonio Salvi] was ascribed to him. He lived in the Netherlands from about 1752 to 1756, in 1754 presenting his opera L’infelice avventurato, probably in Amsterdam [the score was once in Breitkopf’s possession]. Lapis seems to have been in London in 1758–1760, when some instrumental music and songs by him were published there. The last record places him in Edinburgh, as harpsichordist of a visiting Italian intermezzo company which performed Pergolesi’s La serva padrona in June 1763. He may have gone with the same company to York in October 1763 and to Dublin in the spring of 1764.

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La Ginevra, dramma per musica [1739]. Aria: La fronda, che circonda.

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 Asunto: Re: La otra ópera
NotaPublicado: 10 Oct 2025 10:44 
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Henry Mollicone [1946-2022] Mollicone is known for his one-act operas, including Emperor Norton, Starbird, and The Mask of Evil. One of his most popular works is the one-act chamber opera The Face on the Barroom Floor. Originally commissioned in 1978 for the Central City Opera of Central City, Colorado, The Face on the Barroom Floor was inspired by the painting of the same title on the floor of the Teller House Bar in Central City. Mollicone has also written three full-length operas: Coyote Tales, Hotel Eden, and Gabriel's Daughter. He has written works for both television and film including The Premonition [1976]. In addition, he has written pieces for voice, ballet, chorus and other various chamber combinations. As a former faculty member of the Santa Clara University Department of Music, Henry Mollicone also acts as an instructor, adjudicator and collaborator. His greatest musical influences have been Puccini, Verdi, Britten, Bernstein.

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The Face on the Barroom Floor, opera en un acto [1978]. He paints the portrait of his love.

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