The Complete Operas
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Title:
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The Complete Operas |
Otros títulos:
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Il Tabarro |
Intérprete/ Colaborador:
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Giacomo Puccini; New Philharmonia Orchestra; Ambrosian Opera Chorus; Lorin Maazel |
Código CDU:
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Pu.07 |
Forma Musical:
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Operas. |
Abstract:
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Giacomo Puccini was the most important composer of Italian opera after Verdi. He wrote in the verismo style, a counterpart to the movement of Realism in literature and a trend that favored subjects and characters from everyday life for opera. On his often commonplace settings Puccini lavished memorable melodies and lush orchestration. It was around the turn of the twentieth century that he reached his artistic zenith, composing in succession his three most popular and effective operas, La Bohème, Tosca, and Madama Butterfly.
Young Giacomo took organ lessons early on from his uncle, Fortunato Magi, and later from Carlo Angeloni. At ten, he sang in local church choirs and by age 14 was freelancing as an organist at religious services. His first compositions were for organ, often incorporating operatic and folk elements. By age 18, under the spell of Verdi's Aida, he decided he would study composition with a view to writing opera. At around this time, he composed his first large-scale ... |
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