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Franco Alfano

 
Music Encyclopedia: Franco Alfano

(b Posillipo, 8 March 1875; d San Remo, 27 Oct 1954). Italian composer. He studied in Naples and with Jadassohn in Lepizig (1895-6), then moved to Berlin and Paris (1899-1905). He gained his first success with Risurrezione, a Tolstoy adaptation in the Puccini tradition (1904), followed most notably by La leggenda di Sakuntala (1921), which inclines more to Debussy and Strauss. Its rich orientalism made him the obvious choice to complete Puccini's Turandot, though his ending was drastically cut by Toscanini and not heard in full until 1982. His other works include more operas, songs (including four groups of Tagore settings), three string quartets, two symphonies (1910, 1932) and violin and cello sonatas.



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Artist: Franco Alfano
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  • Period: Modern (1910-1949)
  • Country: Italy
  • Born: March 08, 1875 in Posillipo, Italy
  • Died: October 27, 1954 in San Remo, Italy

Biography

The name of Italian composer Franco Alfano is best known from his having put in order Giacomo Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot. Within his native Italy, Alfano is likewise revered for his opera Risurrezione (1904), which had already achieved a thousand performances in Italian opera houses by the time Alfano died at the age of 79 in 1954. Yet even in Italy, Alfano's true historical place in Italian music is little recognized. If one were to regard the first generation of Italian modernists as consisting of five composers headed off by Respighi, Malipiero, Pizzetti, and Casella, then rightfully Alfano would be the fifth name on that list.

Alfano studied primarily in Italy, but in 1895 traveled to Leipzig to take lessons with renowned pedagogue Salomon Jadassohn. Alfano initially pursued a career as a concert pianist, an endeavor that found culmination in the premiere of his now-lost piano concerto (1900); thereafter Alfano devoted himself to composition, although he worked to some degree as an accompanist to singers of art songs, particularly in his own. Alfano's life changed significantly with the enormous success of his third opera, Risurrezione (1904), which is based on Tolstoy and composed in the verismo style then in vogue in Italy. Alfano's contact with the music of Debussy shortly afterward caused a dramatic change of heart stylistically, and from its influence Alfano forged his mature identity. Throughout his life, Alfano composed about 15 operas, of which the most important outside of Risurrezione are L'Ombra di Don Giovanni (1914), La leggenda di Sakùntala (1921), and Cyrano de Bergerac (1936). By the time of his last-named work, Alfano's orientalist, post-Impressionist manner had given way to a more neo-Classical approach. Unlike other composers associated with verismo, Alfano was quite productive in the field of instrumental music. Although many of these works are lost, his chamber music is of outstanding quality, particularly his Sonata for cello and piano (1925) and the Sonata for violin and piano (1933); Alfano also produced a significant cycle of three string quartets (1918, 1926, and 1945). While it is a mistake to regard Alfano as a holdover from the late nineteenth century Italian tradition, it appears that this is the fate posterity has arranged for him, and several of his major works are impossible to account for. Only time will tell if posterity catches up with Alfano's most meaningful achievements in the field of early Italian modernism. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Franco Alfano
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Franco Alfano (March 8, 1875 – October 27, 1954) was an Italian composer and pianist. Though today best known for completing Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot in 1926, he had considerable success with his own works during his lifetime.

Contents

Biography

He was born in Posillipo, near Naples. Until recent times, musical histories usually gave the year of Alfano's birth, incorrectly, as 1876. He attended piano privately under Alessandro Longo (1864-1946), and harmony and composition respectively under Camillo de Nardis (1857-1951) and Paolo Serrao (1830-1907) at the conservatory San Pietro a Majella in Naples. Later, after graduating, he pursued further composition studies with Hans Sitt (1850-1922) and Salomon Jadassohn (1831-1902) in Leipzig. While working there he met his idol, Edvard Grieg, and wrote numerous piano and orchestral pieces. He completed his first opera, Miranda, still unpublished, for which he also wrote the libretto after a novel by Antonio Fogazzaro, in 1896. His work La Fonte Di Enschir (libretto by Luigi Illica) was refused by Ricordi but was shown in Wrocław (then Breslau) as Die Quelle von Enschir on 8 November 1898, enjoying some success.

The following three operas are usually considered as his most important:

From 1918 he was Director of the Conservatory of Bologna, and he directed the Turin Conservatory from 1923. Alfano died in San Remo.[1]

Historical perspectives

Fanfare Sept/Oct 98-99 gives the following information: Alfano's reputation suffers because (a) he should not be judged as a composer on the basis of the task he was given in completing Turandot (La Scala, April 25, 1926), (b) "we almost never hear everything he wrote for Turandot--the standard ending heavily edits Alfano's work."[2] (c)"...it is not his conclusion that is performed in productions of Turandot but only what the premiere conductor Arturo Toscanini included from it...Puccini had worked for nine months on the following concluding duet and at his death had left behind a whole ream of sketches....Alfano had to reconstruct ...according to his best assessment...and with his imagination and magnifying glass" since Puccini's material "had not really been legible."

[Konrad Dryden, cited supra, p. 33, adds that the project, reluctantly undertaken, resulted in "near blindness in his right eye, requiring three months spent in darkened rooms."]

Fogel: "Alfano's reputation has also suffered [IC:along with Mascagni], understandably, because of his willingness to associate himself closely with Mussolini's Fascist government."

Alex Ross, in an article in The New Yorker, February 27, 2006, pp. 84-85 notes a new ending composed by Luciano Berio premiered in 2002 [1] - this is preferred by some critics, for making a more satisfactory resolution of Turandot's change of heart, and of being more in keeping with Puccini's evolving technique.

List of works

  • 1896 Miranda Opera
  • 1898 La Fonte di Enschir Opera
  • 1899 Four Romanian Dances for piano
  • 1901 Napoli Ballet
  • 1901 Lorenza - Ballet
  • 1904 Risurrezione Opera
  • 1909 Suite Romantica for orchestra (became Eliana)
  • 1909 Il principe di Zilah - Opera
  • 1910 Symphony n. 1
  • 1910 I Cavalieri e la Bella Opera (never completed)
  • 1914 Lombra di Don Giovanni Opera (later Don Juan de Manara)
  • 1918 Tre poemi by Tagore for voice and piano
  • 1918 Quartet n. 1 for strings
  • 1919 Six songs for voice and piano
  • 1921 La Leggenda di Sakùntala Opera
  • 1923 Eliana Ballet from Suite Romantica
  • 1923 Sonata for violin and piano
  • 1925 Sonata for cello and piano
  • 1926 Turandot finale Opera
  • 1926 Quartet n. 2 for strings
  • 1927 Madonna Imperia Opera
  • 1928 Tre Liriche by Tagore for voice and piano
  • 1929 Trio
  • 1930 Lultimo Lord Opera semiseria
  • 1930 Himno al Libertador dedicated to Simon Bolivar
  • 1933 Vesuvio Ballet
  • 1933 Symphony n. 2
  • 1935 Divertimento for piano and chamber orchestra
  • 1936 Nuove Liriche Tagoriane for voice and piano
  • 1936 Quintet for piano and strings
  • 1936 Cyrano de Bergerac Opera
  • 1939 Tre Nuove Liriche
  • 1941 Don Juan de Manara Opera
  • 1943 E Giunto il Nostro Ultimo Autunno for voice and piano
  • 1945 Quartet n. 3 for strings
  • 1948 Cinque Nuove Liriche Tagoriane for voice and piano
  • 1949 Il Dottor Antonio Opera
  • 1950 Vesuvius Opera for radio (from Vesuvius)
  • 1952 Sakùntala Opera (reconstruction)
  • 1953 Sinfonia Classica from Symphony n. 1

Other works: Suite Adriatica; Intermezzi for Strings; Ninna-Nanna Partenopea.

Symphonies 1 and 2 [reviewed by Barry Brenesal in the same issue of Fanfare, pp. 103-4].

Notes

  1. ^ Konrad Dryden, cpo recoding of Cirano di Bergerac gives this information.
  2. ^ In the cpo opera set of Cyrano de Bergerac, Andreas K.W. Meyer, translated into English by Susan Marie Praeder, pp. 29-30.

Further Reading

Konrad Dryden: Franco Alfano, Transcending Turandot, (Scarecrow Press Inc., 2009)

External links


 
 
Learn More
Franco Alfano: Symp;honies 1 & 2 (Classical Album)
Turandot (opera)
Arturo Basile (Classical Musician)

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