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Giuseppe Pietri

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Name
  
Giuseppe Pietri

Role
  
Composer

Education
  
Milan Conservatory


Giuseppe Pietri wwwtenewsitarchiviofoto113440842jpg

Died
  
August 11, 1946, Milan, Italy

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Giuseppe Pietri - Vecchio trescone (1932)


Giuseppe Pietri (Sant'Ilario, frazione of Marina di Campo, comune of Campo nell'Elba, 6 May 1886 – Milan, 11 August 1946) was an Italian composer, known primarily for his work in operetta. Excerpts from one of his works, the opera Maristella, were widely recorded and continue to be so on CD. The aria "Io conosco un giardino" from that work has been popular with tenors, and has been frequently recorded separately; among the singers to record it are Luciano Pavarotti, Beniamino Gigli, Joseph Calleja and more recently, Rolando Villazón. Pietri studied composition at the Milan Conservatory at Gaetano Coronato. He studied harmony and counterpoint with Amintore Galli. He composed operas in versistical tradition, but it was his operettas that made him a popular success. He developed an independent Italian idiom for the operetta. The most famous was L'acqua cheta, which premiered in Rome in 1920. The text was from a 1908 Tuscan dialect piece by Augusto Novelli, a romantic comedy in the Florentine petty bourgeois style. Rompicollo was premiered in 1928 in Milan, and was translated into German as Das große Rennen ("The Big Race").

Contents

Operas

  • Calendimaggio, libretto by Pietro Gori, Florence 1910
  • Ruy Blas, based on Victor Hugo, Bologna 1916
  • Maristella, Naples 1930 (excerpts available on CD from Myto Records, with Rina Gigli and Agostino Lazzari, 1956)
  • Bionda Rondine, Livorno 1937
  • La canzone di San Giovanni, San Remo 1939
  • Operettas (selection)

  • Addio giovinezza ("Adieu, Youth"), libretto by Sandro Camasio, Livorno 1915
  • L'acqua cheta ("Still Waters"), libretto by Augusto Novelli, Nessi Angelo, Rome 1920
  • Guarda, guarda la mostarda!, Rome 1923
  • La donna perduta, libretto by Guglielmo Zorzi, Guglielmo Giannini, Rome 1923
  • Prima Rosa, libretto by Renato Simoni, Milan 1926
  • Rompicollo ("The Race"), libretto by Luigi Bonelli and Ferdinando Paolieri, Milan 1928
  • Casa mia casa mia ..., libretto by Augusto Novelli, Nessi Angelo, Rome 1930
  • References

    Giuseppe Pietri Wikipedia