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Lucio Agostini

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Name
  
Lucio Agostini

Role
  
Composer

Parents
  
Giuseppe Agostini


Lucio Agostini image2findagravecomphotos201313395683964136

Died
  
February 15, 1996, Toronto, Canada

Music director
  
Churchill's Island, Train Busters

Similar People
  
Lorne Greene, Joseph Stalin, Louis Applebaum, Winston Churchill

Kim Jarrett, Mike Costantino and Lucio Agostini at Clubhouse Fridays, Sizzle


Lucio Agostini (Fano, Italy, 30 December 1913 – Toronto, 15 February 1996) was an Italian-born composer, arranger, and conductor who established his career in Canada.

Contents

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Life

Lucio Agostini Lucio Agostini 1913 1996 Find A Grave Memorial

At age three, Agostini moved with his family to Montreal. His father, Giuseppe Agostini, was a composer and conductor and it is from him that he had his initial musical training beginning at age five. He later pursued further studies in harmony and composition with Louis Michiels and Henri Miro and in cello with Peter Van der Meerschen.

At 16, Agostini was playing with the Montreal Philharmonic Orchestra as a cellist and was a part-time band player in a nightclub band playing saxophone and clarinet. From 1932 to 1943, he composed film music for the Associated Screen News of Canada newsreels, and in 1934 he began working as a conductor for the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission (the forerunner to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). In Toronto, where he moved in 1943, he composed and conducted the incidental music for drama series and variety programs on the CBC radio and television, and for over 20 years he held the position as conductor and arranger on the popular weekly series Front Page Challenge. As a composer, he wrote for The Tommy Ambrose Show and The World of Music, musicals, scores for movies (including a brief stint in Hollywood from 1955–56), shorts (many for the National Film Board of Canada’s Canada Carries On and The World in Action series), concertos and an opera.

Agostini won the John Drainie Award from ACTRA in 1983 in recognition of his contributions to broadcasting in Canada.

References

Lucio Agostini Wikipedia