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Alessandro Nini
1805 - 1880
Italy
Picture Picture
A. Nini
Alessandro Nini (01/11/1805 - 27/12/1880), an Italian composer, born in Fano, Pesaro. He had a varied musical career that included teaching singing in St Petersburg before returning to Italy to try his hand at opera. After some 10 mainly successful operas, he retired from the stage on his appointment to succeed Mayr as Maestro di Capella in Bergamo. This also included teaching at the school where Donizetti had been a pupil.
Author:Russell Burdekin
Requiem
Period:Romanticism
Musical form:mass
No details available.
Source:Robert Chase, Dies Irae: A Guide to Requiem Music, Scarecrow Press, Inc. 2003
Messa per Rossini - Ingemisco
Period:Romanticism
Composed in:1869
Musical form:fragment
Text/libretto:Latin mass
Duration:10'59''
In memory of:Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868)
Label(s):Hänssler Classic 91.108
In 1868, four days after the death of Gioacchino Rossini, composer of The Barber of Seville, Moses, and William Tell (among much else), Verdi proposed a requiem mass for the illustrious deceased consisting of individual movements by Italy's "most eminent" composers. Of the dozen recruited (in addition to Verdi himself), contemporary audiences will recognize not one. At Verdi's suggestion, it consisted of contributions from the following composers: Antonio Buzzolla ('Requiem and Kyrie'); Antonio Bazzini ('Dies irae'); Carlo Pedrotti ('Tuba mirum'); Antonio Cagnoni ('Quid sum miser'); Federico Ricci ('Recordare'); Alessandro Nini ('Ingemisco'); Raimondo Boucheron ('Confutatis' and 'Oro Supplex'); Carlo Coccia ('Lacrymosa'); Gaetano Gaspari ('Domine Jesu'); Pietro Platania ('Sanctus'); Lauro Rossi ('Agnus Dei'); Teodulo Mabellini ('Lux aeterna') and Giuseppe Verdi himself ('Libera me'). Yet each did his part, and a two-hour homage to Rossini resulted. The composite requiem mass for Rossini was to have been performed in 1869 in Bologna to commemorate the anniversary of Rossini's death. For tangled reasons—this was Italy—the planned performances failed to materialize. Verdi was not the only contributor to recycle his part within a larger composition of his own, and his staggering 'Libera me' duly made its way into the requiem for Italy's great nationalist novelist and poet Alessandro Manzoni. But the forgotten patchwork Messa per Rossini only saw the light in 1988, in Parma. On June 22, Helmuth Rilling, the conductor on that occasion, dusts it off as the opening concert of his Oregon Bach Festival, in Eugene, which by no means confines itself to Bach.


♫ 06. Ingemisco
© Hänssler Classic 91.108
Author:Austin Baer
Picture
G. Rossini
(dedicatee)