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Gialdino Gialdini

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Name
  
Gialdino Gialdini

Role
  
Composer

Died
  
March 6, 1919



Born
  
10 November 1843
Pescia, Tuscany, Italy

Occupation
  
Italian composer and conductor

Gialdino Gialdini (10 November 1842 – 6 March 1919) was an Italian composer and orchestra conductor.

Gialdini was born in Pescia, Tuscany, and studied at Florence with Teodulo Mabellini. He won a prize offered by the Pergola Theatre of that city for the best opera, with Rosmunda, which met, however, with an unfavorable reception when produced in 1868. After two more operas he tired of composing operas and started conducting opera productions, to international acclaim. In 1889 he conducted Wagner's Lohengrin at Bologna. Later he returned to composing operas. In September 1904 he became the Artistic Director of the Conservatorio Giuseppe Verdi in the then Austrian city of Trieste but had to abandon the post when Italy entered the war against Austria in May 1915. He then returned to his native Pescia for retirement, and died there aged 76.

Works

  • Rosmunda (opera, premiered 5 March 1868 at the Teatro Pergola, Florence)
  • La secchia rapita (opera buffa, premiered 1872 at the Teatro Goldoni, Florence)
  • l'Idolo cinese (opera buffa, premiered 1874 at the Teatro delle Logge, Florence)
  • I due soci (opera buffa, premiered 24 February 1892 at the Teatro Brunetti, Bologna)
  • La Pupilla (opera in 2 acts, premiered 23 October 1896 at the Societá Filarmonica Drammatica, Trieste)
  • La Bufera (opera, premiered 26 November 1910 at the Politeama Ciscutti, Pola)
  • Album vocale
  • Minuetto (for string orchestra)
  • Eco della Lombardia (collection of 50 popular songs, edited by Giardini and Giulio Ricordi)
  • References

    Gialdino Gialdini Wikipedia