Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Carlo Lombardo

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Name
  
Carlo Lombardo

Role
  
Composer


Siblings
  
Costantino Lombardo

Libretti
  
Si

Carlo Lombardo cronologiameglioitimgeventi01000011991jpg

Died
  
December 19, 1959, Milan, Italy

Movies
  
The Island Monster, The Country of the Campanelli

People also search for
  
Pietro Mascagni, Costantino Lombardo, Roberto Bianchi Montero, Alberto Vecchietti

Monogamy


Carlo Lombardo dei Baroni Lombardo di San Chirico (Naples, 28 November 1869 - Milan, 19 December 1959) known also under the composer-pseudonyms Léon Bard, Leo Bard, Leblanc and M. Fernandez, was an Italian operetta impresario, comedian, librettist, publisher and "composer" of pasticcio productions of other composers' music. He is regarded in Italy as the father of the late 19th and early 20th Century revival in Italian operetta. He was responsible, in a somewhat debatable manner, for getting Pietro Mascagni to write the operetta Sì. His brother was Costantino Lombardo, Italian conductor and composer. His publishing house, Lombardo Editore, continues to publish sheet music for operettas.

Contents

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Why Don't You Love Me?


Operettas and Pasticcios

  • La duchessa del Bal Tabarin, 1917;
  • Madama di Tebe, libretto and music by Lombardo, Milan, 7 March 1918;
  • , musiche di Pietro Mascagni, Rome, Teatro Quirino, 13 Dec 1919;
  • Il re di Chez-Maxim, music it:Mario Pasquale Costa, 1919
  • La danza delle libellule, music by Franz Lehár and Carlo Lombardo, Milan 3 May 1922;
  • it:Scugnizza, music Mario Pasquale Costa, Turin, 16 Dec 1922
  • it:Il paese dei campanelli, music Virgilio Ranzato and Carlo Lombardo, Milan, Teatro Lirico (Milan), 23 Nov 1923
  • it:Cin Ci Là Milan, 18 Dec 1925
  • La casa innamorata, libretto Renato Simoni 1929
  • Recordings

  • La duquesa de Bal Tabarin - Spanish zarzuela version of the Italian operetta - Elsa del Campo, Tomás Álvarez, Dolores Pérez, Santiago Ramalle, Coros de Radio Nacional de España, Orquesta de Cámara de Madrid, Enrique Estela, director
  • References

    Carlo Lombardo Wikipedia