Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAP. I ROSSINI'S CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH
- CHAP. II LA PIETEA DEL PARAGONE
- CHAP. III ITALIAN OPERA UNTIL THE TIME OF ROSSINI
- CHAP. IV TANCREDI
- CHAP. V OPERATIC CUSTOMS IN ROSSINI'S TIME
- CHAP. VI ROSSINI AT NAPLES
- CHAP. VII PREPARATIONS FOR THE BARBER
- CHAP. VIII IL BARBIERE
- CHAP. IX ROSSINI AND THE COMIC IN MUSIC
- CHAP. X FROM OTELLO TO SEMIKAMIDE
- CHAP. XI ROSSINI ON HIS TRAVELS
- CHAP. XII DONIZETTI
- CHAP. XIII VERDI
- LIST OF ROSSINI'S PUBLISHED WORKS
CHAP. XIII - VERDI
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAP. I ROSSINI'S CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH
- CHAP. II LA PIETEA DEL PARAGONE
- CHAP. III ITALIAN OPERA UNTIL THE TIME OF ROSSINI
- CHAP. IV TANCREDI
- CHAP. V OPERATIC CUSTOMS IN ROSSINI'S TIME
- CHAP. VI ROSSINI AT NAPLES
- CHAP. VII PREPARATIONS FOR THE BARBER
- CHAP. VIII IL BARBIERE
- CHAP. IX ROSSINI AND THE COMIC IN MUSIC
- CHAP. X FROM OTELLO TO SEMIKAMIDE
- CHAP. XI ROSSINI ON HIS TRAVELS
- CHAP. XII DONIZETTI
- CHAP. XIII VERDI
- LIST OF ROSSINI'S PUBLISHED WORKS
Summary
Guiseppe Verdi, the successor at once of Bellini and of Donizetti, but whose energetic style bears a far greater resemblance to that of Donizetti in his later works (Maria di Rohan, for instance) than to that of Bellini, was born near Parma, on the 9fch of October, 1814. His father was an innkeeper in a humble way of business, and Verdi's first lessons in music were taken from the local organist. In 1833, thanks to the assistance of a rich patron of art, he went to Milan, where for three years he studied under Lavigna, musical conductor at the Scala Theatre. It was not until 1839 that he succeeded in getting his first opera, Oberto, Conte di San Bonifazio, produced. But the manager of the Scala, where it was performed was so satisfied with its success that he gave the young composer an order for three other works. Unfortunately at this juncture Verdi lost a wife whom he had recently married and to whom he was tenderly attached. He had just undertaken the uncongenial and now hateful task of composing an opera buffa entitled, Un Giorno di Regno; and, as might have been expected, this work was somewhat deficient in comedy. It failed; and so complete was the fiasco that the director of La Scala felt himself justified in declining to receive from Verdi the two other operas which he had agreed to take.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Rossini and his School , pp. 106 - 112Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009