Sinigaglia, Leone

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Sinigaglia, Leone

Piemonte op. 36 for orchestra

SKU: 4039 Category:

36,00 

Preface

Leone Sinigaglia
(b. Turin, 14th August 1868 – d. Turin, 16th May 1944)

Piemonte: Suite for orchestra, Op.36

(first performed in Utrecht, 16th February 1910)

Through fields and woods p.1
A rustic dance p.30
In montibus sanctis p.68
Carnevale Piemontese p.87

 

Preface
Together with Sgambati (1841–1914), Martucci (1856–1909) and Bossi (1861–1925), Leone Sinigaglia is in the first wave of Romantic Italian composers to resist the lure of the opera house and concentrate on writing chamber and symphonic works. As such, these figures prepared the way for the better-known ‘Generation of the 1880s’ – Alfano, Respighi, Casella, Malipiero and Pizzetti – to revive what they saw as the true legacy of Italian instrumental music. Sinigaglia was born into a highly cultured upper middle-class milieu in Turin. Friends of the family included prominent representatives of the arts and the sciences, notably the scientist Galileo Ferraris, the criminologist Cesare Lombroso, and the sculptor Leonardo Bistolfi – the dedicatee of several of Sinigaglia’s compositions. Sinigaglia was well educated, spoke French, German and English, and went on to study law at university. He was also an accomplished climber who detailed his pioneering ascents of peaks in the Dolomites in his book Ricordi di arrampicate nelle Dolomiti 1893-1895 published in Italy in 1896, and in an English version (Climbing Reminiscences of the Dolomites), two years later. His early musical training in violin, piano and composition took place at Turin’s Liceo Musicale under the tutelage of Giovanni Bolzoni and Federico Buffaletti. Some songs, piano pieces and chamber works date from this time. He made numerous visits to Milan and there was befriended by Puccini, Catalani and Bazzini; it was Bazzini who advised the young composer that he should travel to other European cultural centres if he wished to mature. In 1894 Sinigaglia moved to Vienna where he became one of Brahms’s intimate circle and studied composition with Eusebius Mandyczewski. From these years came many songs and a Violin Concerto Op.20, dedicated to Arrigo Serato. Around 1900, through his contacts with the Bohemian String Quartet he met Dvořák in Prague and became his pupil for nine months. Dvořák demonstrated to the Italian the possibility of incorporating folk music into symphonic works. An immediate consequence of this was his Rapsodia piemontese Op.26 for violin and orchestra, much played by Fritz Kreisler in the version for violin and piano.

 

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Score Data

Edition

Repertoire Explorer

Genre

Orchestra

Size

210 x 297 mm

Printing

Reprint

Pages

164

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