Vittorio Giannini
Vittorio Giannini (October 19, 1903, Philadelphia – November 28, 1966, New York City) was a neoromantic American composer of operas, songs, symphonies, and band works.
Life and work
Giannini began as a violinist under the tutelage of his mother Antonietta Briglia; he would go on to study violin and composition at the Milan Conservatory on scholarship, and then to take his graduate degree at the Juilliard School. He returned to Juilliard to teach, moving on to the Manhattan School of Music and the Curtis Institute of Music. His students included Herbie Hancock, Nicolas Flagello, David Amram, Mark Bucci, Alfred Reed, Anthony Iannaccone, M. William Karlins, Irwin Swack, John Corigliano, Adolphus Hailstork, Rolande Maxwell Young, Thomas Pasatieri, Avraham Sternklar, and Nancy Bloomer Deussen. Giannini was the founder and first president of the North Carolina School of the Arts in 1965, which he envisioned as a type of Juilliard of the South, bringing artists such as cellist Irving Klein and violinist Ruggiero Ricci to teach there. He remained there until his death in 1966.[1]
Giannini's father, Ferruccio Giannini, was an opera singer and founder of the Verdi Opera House in Philadelphia, as were as his two sisters. Euphemia Giannini Gregory taught Voice at the Curtis Institute for 40 years counting among her students the opera divas Anna Moffo and Judith Blegen.[2] In fact, it was his sister, Dusolina Giannini, who was a pivotal figure in the success of his operas. Dusolina was a dramatic soprano and prima donna who played such roles as Aida and Donna Anna throughout Europe, until moving to the United States to sing with the Metropolitan Opera and finally to spend her remaining years teaching. Her career was already well underway when Vittorio wished to premiere his first opera, Lucedia and it was her influence that led to its production in 1934. Four years later she would create the role of Hester Prynne in his opera from Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter (adapted by Karl Flaster).[3] Both operas would be successful, as would most of his later operas (though two, Casanova and Christus, remain unperformed).
His partnership with poet Karl Flaster was a fruitful one. In addition to his work on The Scarlet Letter, Flaster was the librettist for several of Giannini's operas, including Lucedia and The Harvest. Also, Flaster collaborated with Giannini on many of his most successful art songs, including "Tell Me, Oh Blue Blue Sky";[4] many of these songs are now staples of vocal recitalists' repertoire.
Though it was initially his vocal and operatic works that earned him greatest renown, Giannini also composed seven symphonies (only the last five were numbered), concerti, and chamber music. During the last eight years of his life he composed five works for wind band and, ironically, today they are his most widely performed compositions. One of them, his Symphony No. 3 (1958) has become a staple of the band repertoire. Despite the wide range of his output, little of his music is in the active repertoire. However, today a representative sample of all aspects of his work is available on recording.
Selected works
- Stabat mater (1922), SATB and orchestra
- "Tell Me, O Blue, Blue Sky" (1927), voice/piano
- String Quartet (1930)
- Suite (1931), orchestra
- Piano Quintet (1932)
- Lucedia (1934), opera, libretto K. Flaster
- Piano Concerto (1935)
- Symphony ‘In memoriam Theodore Roosevelt’ (1935)
- Organ Concerto (1937)
- Triptych (1937), soprano choir and strings
- IBM Symphony (1937), orchestra
- Requiem (1937), choir and orchestra
- The Scarlet Letter (1938), opera, libretto Flaster after Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Beauty and the Beast (1938), radio opera in one act
- Blennerhassett (1939), radio opera in one act
- Sonata No. 1 (1940), violin and piano
- "Sing to My Heart a Song" (c. 1942), voice/piano
- Sonata No. 2 (1944), violin and piano
- Variations on a Cantus firmus (1947), piano
- The Taming of the Shrew (1950), opera, libretto by Giannini and D. Fee after Shakespeare
- Symphony No. 1 (1950)
- Divertimento No. 1 (1953), orchestra
- Symphony No. 2 (1955), orchestra
- Prelude and Fugue (1955), string orchestra
- Fantasia for Band (1963), band
- Preludium and Allegro (1958), symphonic band
- Symphony No. 3 (1958), symphonic band
- Symphony No. 4 (1959), orchestra
- The Medead (1960), soprano and orchestra
- The Harvest (1961), opera, libretto Flaster
- Divertimento No. 2 (1961), orchestra
- Antigone (1962), soprano and orchestra
- Psalm cxxx (1963), bass/cello and orchestra
- Sonata for Flute and Piano (1964), flute/piano
- Variations and Fugue (1964), symphonic band
- Symphony No. 5 (1965)
- Servant of Two Masters (1966), opera, libretto B. Stambler, after C. Goldoni
Footnotes
- (Simmons 2001)
- (Simmons 2004, 152)
- (Simmons 2004, 153–54)
- (Simpson and Flaster 1988, 380–81, et passim)
References
- Simmons, Walter G. 2001. ""Giannini, Vittorio". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
- Simmons, Walter. 2004. Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
- Simpson, Anne Key, and Karl Wonderly Flaster. 1988. "A Working Relationship: The Giannini-Flaster Collaboration". American Music 6, no. 4 (Winter): 375–408.
Further reading
- Haskell, Harry, and Walter G. Simmons. n.d. "Vittorio Giannini". Grove Music Online (OperaBase) (subscription access)
- Long, Michael. 2008. Beautiful Monsters: Imagining the Classic in Musical Media. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-22897-9 (cloth); ISBN 978-0-520-25720-7.
- Mark, Michael L. 1969a. "The Life and Work of Vittorio Giannini (1903–1966)". DMA thesis. Washington, DC: Catholic University of America.
- Mark, Michael L. 1969b. "The Band Music of Vittorio Giannini". Music Educators Journal 55, no. 8 (April): 77–80.
- Mullins, Joe Barry. 1969–70. "A Comparative Analysis of Three Symphonies for Band". Journal of BandResearch 6, no. 1:17–28.
- Parris, Robert. 1957. "Vittorio Giannini and the Romantic Tradition". Juilliard Review 4, no. 2:32–46.
- Price, Jeffrey Wallace. 1989. "The Songs of Vittorio Giannini on Poems by Karl Flaster". DMus diss. Tallahassee: Florida State University.
- Schaunseer, Max de. n.d. "Giannini, Dusolina". Grove Music Online (subscription access)
- Simmons, Walter G., "Giannini, Vittorio". 2005. Grove Music Online (updated 22 September). (subscription access)
- Villamil, Victoria Etnier. 1993. A Singer's Guide to the American Art Song: 1870–1980, with a foreword by Thomas Hampson. Lanham, MD and Oxford: Scarecrow Press, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8108-5217-4.
- Wynn, James Leroy. 1964–65. "An Analysis of the First Movement of the Symphony No. 3 for Band by Vittorio Giannini". Journal of Band Research 1, no. 2:19–26.