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Aurelio Giorni

Aurelio Carlo Pietro Teodoro Giorni (15 September 1895 – 23 September 1938) was an Italian-American pianist and composer. After immigrating to the United States in 1914, he toured the nation as a soloist and with the Elshuco Trio. He composed chamber music, orchestral music, études, as well as a sonata for piano and violoncello.[1]

Aurelio Giorni
Giorni c. 1930s
Background information
Born(1895-09-15)15 September 1895
Perugia, Italy
Died23 September 1938(1938-09-23) (aged 43)
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
GenresClassical
Occupation(s)Pianist, Composer, Pedagogue
Instrument(s)Piano
LabelsDuo-Art, Brunswick

Early life edit

Aurelio was born on September 15, 1895, in Perugia, Italy, the first of two sons born to Carlo Giuseppe Giorni, a Roman landscape painter, and Linda Bergner Giorni, an American mezzo-soprano. Aurelio was the great-grandson of Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen. Aurelio's parents had him tutored privately at home until, at age 13, he attended Santa Cecilia Conservatory of Music and studied piano with Maestro Giovanni Sgambati and Ferruccio Busoni from 1909 to 1911.

 
Aurelio Giorni portrait - The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts / Music Division (Muller Collection)

He performed joint recitals with his mother Linda as early as February 1908, when he was 12 years old.[2] One such performance took place at the Hotel Excelsior in Rome on March 23, 1911. The press notice read as follows:[3]

The Giorni Concert at the Hotel Excelsior, attracted a very large number of ladies and gentlemen who are already aware of the unusual musical gifts possessed by Madame Linda Giorni & her son, Aurelio.
All the numbers of the program were well received, and while the singing of Madame Giorni has been for several years the admiration of the Roman public, the remarkable interpretation give by Aurelio Giorni, (only 15 years old, and yet a composer of merit) added much to the novelty and interest. He played compositions by Bach, Chopin, Scarlatti and Sgambati in a manner which astonished and delighted the audience. His success was all the more marked because an unfortunate accident had happened to the piano, and the young musician was obliged to play without the use of the pedals. Madame Giorni sang arie & remanse by Haendel, Sgambati, Tschaikovsky, Brahms & Strauss, as well as compositions by Aurelio Giorni, who accompanied his mother on the piano.

Aurelio graduated from Santa Cecilia before he turned 15, enabling him to enter the Meisterschule für Komposition (Master School for Composition) in Berlin in 1911. There he studied composition with German composer Engelbert Humperdinck and Russian-born pianist, conductor, and composer Ossip Gabrilowitsch.

Aurelio was 16 when he returned to Rome to perform as a soloist. There, in 1912, Aurelio met his future wife, Helen Emerson Miller. Aurelio was known the "wonder child" of Carlo and Linda and was considered a remarkable pianist and composer at only 17 years old.[4]

Between 1913 and 1915 he toured Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Scandinavia.[5]

Life in the U.S. edit

On coming to America in the fall of 1914, Aurelio first stayed with his mother's sister, Emma Bergner Sajous and her husband Charles E. de M. Sajous in Philadelphia. When he moved, it was to two residences, one in New York City and one in Philadelphia, the latter for convenience as he had a number of pupils there. It was in New York City that he maintained his studio at 100 Carnegie Hall, and renewed his acquaintance with the Miller family.

In 1918, after America entered World War I, Aurelio enlisted at Fort Hamilton, N.Y., exiting as a private in the U.S. Army. This military service lasted just 6 months but would later hasten his eligibility for U.S. citizenship. In 1919 he joined the Elshuco Trio and began concertizing in New York City and would perform with them over the next 15 years. Aurelio was an active member of The Bohemians, a New York Musicians Club that began in 1907 and continues to this day.[6]

Aurelio returned to Italy to visit his parents in the summer of 1919, and it was that autumn that he began making some 24 known piano rolls for the Duo-Art reproducing piano.

 
The Giorni Family in 1929

In May 1920, Aurelio and Helen became engaged, and they were married on January 1, 1921. They had three daughters: Helen Linda, born in 1921; Yolanda Elisa, born in 1924; and Aurelia Maria, born in 1927.

Death edit

Friday September 23, 1938, was the last day of the Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music, and the last time Aurelio was seen alive. It had been raining heavily due to the record hurricane of 1938. That Friday evening the family called the police to report him missing. The next day the police called to say they'd had a report that a young girl had seen a man answering his description jump off the Pomeroy Avenue bridge into the raging river, and a pocketbook of his was found on the bridge. A thorough search was conducted, including combing the river for several days, without success. It was not until Helen talked to "Aunt Hattie" (Mrs. Charles Harrington), an elderly clairvoyant she would visit who'd been friends with her parents. It was Aunt Hattie who "saw" Aurelio's suicide, by water, and it was she who described to Helen the location of Aurelio's body after several days in the river—a place she had never visited. When Helen relayed the information given her to the Pittsfield police, they are able to find his body on September 30 in the Housatonic River, 1000 feet south of the Pomeroy Avenue bridge.[7]

Aurelio may have been very discouraged and depressed. He was notified just 10 days before his death that his services at Smith College would not be required for the coming term, and was also disappointed when none of his compositions was given place on the South Mountain program, nor was he among the festival performers. Several months prior, on April 25, Aurelio and his family went to Carnegie Hall for the first performance of his Symphony in D Minor, being given that night by the National Orchestral Association under the leadership of conductor Léon Barzin. Aurelio and Helen waited up past midnight for the New York reviews. When Aurelio reads them, he is very dejected. The critic had indicated he never wanted to hear the symphony again. Aurelio had no desire to compose afterwards.

Aurelio Giorni was laid to rest in the family plot at Rosedale Cemetery, Orange, New Jersey, on October 3, 1938. The service at All Angels' Church was conducted by the rector George Trowbridge and the emeritus rector Reverend Townsend, who knew Aurelio as a boy in Italy. Aurelio's quartet was played by the Smith College quartet and several of his works were played on the organ by another friend, Seth Bingham. There was no singing but Laurens Seelye (childhood friend of Helen) read several poems which Aurelio set to music.

A Memorial Concert organized by Musicraft Records was later held at New York Town Hall on December 26, 1938. The musicians were Max Hollaender (violin), Sterling Hunkins (cello), and Eugene Kusmiak (piano), performing the Trio in C Major, a mastery of harmonic and contrapuntal technique characteristic of the composer's mature work.

Elshuco Trio edit

 
The Elshuco Trio in 1929

The Elshuco Trio was formed in 1918 with founding members Samuel Gardner (violin), Willem Willeke (violincello), and Richard Epstein (piano). Willem Willeke was the leader and remained the only cellist throughout the group's existence. The unusual first name was derived from the first syllables of the name of their patroness, Elizabeth Shurtleff Coolidge (1864-1953), who established the Berkshire String Quartet in 1916 and started the Berkshire Chamber Music Festival at South Mountain, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1918. The group had its first public performance at Aeolian Hall in midtown Manhattan in New York City on October 31, 1918.[8]

Aurelio joined the group in the summer of 1919 after Richard Epstein's death.[9] Late in 1919, Reber Johnson also played with the group briefly.[10] By 1920, Elias Breeskin had replaced Samual Gardner on violin.[11] Elias Breeskin left in 1921 and was replaced by William Kroll the following year, who stayed with the group until 1929, when he was replaced by Karl Kraeuter.

The Trio sometimes played for the annual Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music in South Mountain, Pittsfield, Massachusetts.[12] Other known appearances reported where:

The last performance of the Elshuco Trio was their final concert of their 15th season on March 7, 1933, in the United Engineering Societies auditorium (New York), and was augmented for the occasion by Conrad Held, violinist. The works played were the two Brahms piano quartets, in A Major, Op. 26, and G Minor, Op. 25.[13]

Piano Recordings (Duo-Art) edit

The following list shows the known recordings Aurelio Giorni made for Duo-Art beginning around 1919.[14] Some of these piano rolls are in the archives of the University of Maryland Music Library.

Title Composer Catalog No.
Meditation, Op 72, No 5: Tchaikovsky 5873
Etude, Op 1, No 1 Schlozer 5886
*Frühlingsglaube (Faith in Spring) Schubert-Liszt 5900
*Toccata, Op 18, No 4 Sgambati 5911
Murmuring Zephyrs, Op 21, No 4 Jensen 5933
Nocturne, Op 32, No 2 Chopin 5938
Songs without Words, Op 53, No 1, Ab (On the Seashore) Mendelssohn 5951/D369
*Pastorale Giorni** 6026
Hark! Hark! The Lark Schubert-Liszt 6052
*Moment Musical, Op 94, No 2 Schubert 6066
*Petite Valse, Op 28, No 1 Henselt 6090
Prelude in G Minor, Op 23, No 5 Rachmaninoff 6125
*Nutcracker, Op 71: Dance of the Reed Flutes Tchaikovsky-Esipoff 6132
*The Trout, Op 33 Schubert-Heller 6176
Impromptu, Op 90, No 3, Gb Schubert 6189
*L'Arlesienne - Suite No 1, No 2: Minuetto Bizet 6237
Etude, Op 10, No 8, F Chopin 6323
Etude, Op 5, No 2 (Pensez un peu à moi) Henselt 6353
*Staccato-Etude, Op 23, No 2, C A. Rubinstein 6626
Impromptu, Op 31, No 4, g# Sinding 7021
*Faschingsschwank aus Wien, Op 26, No 4: Intermezzo Schumann 7022
*Prelude, Op 35, No 1, e Mendelssohn 7028
Fantasy Pieces, Op 3, No 5, b-b: Sérénade Rachmaninoff 7031
Songs without Words, Op 53, No 19 Sinding 7033

° Selections listed in the University of Maryland catalog.

°° The only other known commercial recording of a Giorni composition (Musicraft Album No. 33, published June 1939). This charmingly naive little Pastorale was written in 1908, when Aurelio (then 13 years old) had studied harmony, counterpoint and composition for 4 years.

Elshuco Trio Recordings (Brunswick label) edit

The following list, provided by the Library of Congress Music Division in 1985, represents all the recordings made by the Elshuco Trio which are known to be extant at the time, in 5 large American libraries. There are three known early recordings which are not on this list - "Narcissus" and "Rosary" by Nevin and one of the Hungarian Dances by Brahms. Stanford University (CST) also has annotated copies of pages from the Brunswick catalogs of 1923 and 1925, where it is noted that these selections were chosen for popular appeal rather than a representative sampling of their repertoire.

Title Composer Issue # Library*
Extase Ganne 10141-A NSY
Spanish Dance Moszkowski 10141-B NSY
Salut d'amour Elgar 10142-A DLC, NN, NSY
Serenade Widor 10142-B DLC, NN, NSY
Autumn and Winter Glazunov 10144-A CST, DLC
Swedish Folk Song Svendsen 10144-B CST, DLC
Far-niente C. Cui 10146-A DLC
Serenade, Op 3 Victor Herbert 10146-B DLC
Melody in D Fauré 10148-A NN, NSY
Scherzo Reissiger 10148-B NN, NSY
Andante, Op 9 Saint-Saëns 10149-A DLC, NSY
Scherzo Schubert 10149-B DLC, NSY
Elegia Arensa 10159-A CST
Scherzo Brahms 10159-B CST
Songs My Mother Taught Me Dvořák 10175-A DLC, NN
A Perfect Day Jacobs-Bond 10175-B DLC, NN
Salut d'amour Elgar 13008-A** CST, CTY
Serenade Widor 13008-B** CST, CTY
Autumn and Winter Glazunov 13032-A** DLC
Swedish Folk Song Svendsen 13032-B** DLC
Extase Ganne 13056-A** NSY
Spanish Dance Moszkowski 13056-B** CST, NN
Far-niente C. Cui 13092-A** CST, DLC
Serenade, Op 3 Victor Herbert 13092-B** CST, DLC

° CST - Stanford University; CTY - Yale University; DLC - Library of Congress; NN - New York Public Library; NSY - Syracuse University

°° Re-issued

Compositions edit

NOTE: Early in 1969, Helen Giorni donated to (1) Exchange & Gift (Music) Division, Library of Congress, and (2) New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Music Division, all of Aurelio's music in her files, whether published or not. This was all cataloged and two lists were prepared, one for each library.

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts (NYPLPA) has numerous scores from the Giorni estate cataloged under call number JPB 83-61.[15]

Composition Year Publisher / Source / Comments
Pastorale 1908 Duo-Art catalog, piano roll #60278
Sonata for violin & piano 1911 "Some Press Notices", The Roman World, March 4, 1911
Three songs: Du bist wie eine Blume, Gretel, Die Loreley 1911 Hotel Excelsior program, March 23, 1911
Opus 1, Theme and Variation in the Old Style 1913 Review in The Times of London, May 6, 1913
Canons (4 or 5) 1920 Personal letters #2 and #3, June 1920; NYPLPA
Wedding March (dedicated "To Helen") 1920 Family knowledge, manuscript retained. Reported in wedding article, So. Orange, NJ newspaper, Jan 2, 1921.
Sonata in D Minor for violoncello and piano
(with alternate part for viola)
1925 G. Schirmer Inc., New York ©1925;
Theodore Presser Company (PR.114403190)
Symphonic poem Orlando Furioso, for piano - 4 hands 1926 NYPLPA
Awakening, two songs for [high or medium] voice and piano 1927 G. Schirmer Inc., New York ©1927; (words by Edmund W. Putnam)
24 Concert Études in all the major and minor keys, for piano 1927 G. Schirmer Inc., New York ©1927[16]
Minuet and allegro in early romantic style, for orchestra 1928 Composed for the Schubert Centenary in 1928 and arranged for the New York Chamber Music Society
2-Piano Phantasy 1929 Personal letter #39
Sonata in Eb Major, for piano and flute 1932 George Barrère, flute; Prem. Dec. 17, 1933, NYFC, Steinway Hall, New York
Sonata in A Major, for clarinet and piano 1933 J. Green Music, Hollywood, CA; NYPLPA; UMD Library - Score Collection Inventory: G
Trio in C Major, for violin, cello and piano 1934 Musicraft Records, Inc., New York (audio recording, 4 78rpm disks)
"Margaritae Sorori", based on poem by William Ernest Henley 1936 Family knowledge
Trio, for flute, cello and piano 1936 News release, NY College of Music, March 12, 1936
Quintet, for flute, violin, viola, cello and piano 1936 News release, NY College of Music, March 12, 1936
Symphony in D Minor 1936 Performance by the National Orchestral Association - Léon Barzin, Conductor - April 25, 1938
Cradle Song, for medium voice and piano   G. Schirmer Inc., New York ©1941; (words by Florence K. Mixter)

Other works edit

The following compositions are known to exist as part of the NYPLPA collection or others, but for which the year they were written is uncertain. Most of these were likely unpublished.

  • Aria for piano, in F Major
  • Concerto in D Major, for pianoforte and orchestra
  • Double fugue for piano, 4 hands
  • Fantasie-sonata in A Minor
  • Intermezzo in C Minor, for flute, violoncello and harp (or piano)
  • Merry fugue in Eb, for piano
  • Six modal quatrains, for female 4-part chorus
  • The Music Makers, for chorus (SATB), unaccompanied
  • The Phantom Leaves, song for mixed 4-part chorus a cappella or with string quartet accompaniment
  • Rhapsody Diveretissement, for piano, oboe, clarinet, horn and bassoon
  • Sonata in E Minor, for piano and violin
  • Sonata in D Minor, for piano and violoncello (or viola)
  • The Dreamer, song for 4 part male chorus (or quartet) with 2 piano accompaniment
  • Trio in Bb, for piano, violin and violoncello
  • Variations Concertantes on The British Grenadiers, for flute, violin, viola, violoncello and harp (or piano)
  • Zodiac Town - 12 children's carols, for 4 mixed voices (a cappella, or with piano accompaniment); words by Nancy Byrd Turner


Additionally, the NYPLPA collection lists over two dozen "songs with piano accompaniment" not listed here, many that contains words credited to several individuals.

External links edit

  • WorldCat Identity for Giorni, Aurelio 1895-1938, 30 works in 33 publications in 3 languages and 111 library holdings
  • Duo-Art rolls available at spencerserolls.com played by Aurelio Giorni
  • The Ellis Island Ship Database page showing Aurelio and Marcello returning from Italy on the Ryndam in September 1920 (passengers #163 and #164).
  • Aurelio Giorni on Facebook
  • (short bio)

References edit

  1. ^ Howard, John Tasker. Our American Music: Three Hundred Years of It. Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York, 1939
  2. ^ Reported in Le Carnet Mondain of February 8, 1908, and The Roman World of February 15, 1908
  3. ^ The Roman World, April 1st, 1911
  4. ^ "Aurelio Giorni's Concerts", The New York Times, Dec 22, 1912
  5. ^ Alfred Remy, Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Third Edition, Harvard College Library, G. Schirmer, 1919 (p. 1085)
  6. ^ "Who was Who in The Bohemians in 1921" 2011-04-19 at the Wayback Machine, March, 2011
  7. ^ Body of Aurelio Giorni, Pianist, Found in River, The Berkshire Eagle, Sep 30, 1938
  8. ^ "Elshuco Trio Appears", The New York Times, November 1, 1918
  9. ^ "Richard Epstein's Funeral", The New York Times, Aug 5, 1919
  10. ^ "The World of Music and Musicians", New York Tribune, Oct 12, 1919, page 11
  11. ^ "Elshuco Trio Heard Again", The New York Times, Feb 20, 1920
  12. ^ "Concert Programmes - Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music"
  13. ^ "Elshuco Trio Ends Season". The New York Times. March 8, 1933, page 18
  14. ^ "Duo-Art Piano Roll Catalog" 2012-12-02 at the Wayback Machine, The Reproducing Piano Roll Foundation, Albert M. Petrak (Editor), 1998
  15. ^ "Aurelio Giorni scores", Music Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Call number JPB 83-61
  16. ^ "24 Concert Études in all major and minor keys", G. Schirmer, Inc., New York © 1927"
  • This article is largely based on the book The Broken Pedal: A Biographical Sketch of Pianist/Composer Aurelio Giorni, 1895-1938 and His Family, a privately published work by Elena G. Burns (daughter, 1921–1998) during 1985/86 in Whittier, California. Although distribution was limited mainly to family members, copies were also provided to the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library.

aurelio, giorni, aurelio, carlo, pietro, teodoro, giorni, september, 1895, september, 1938, italian, american, pianist, composer, after, immigrating, united, states, 1914, toured, nation, soloist, with, elshuco, trio, composed, chamber, music, orchestral, musi. Aurelio Carlo Pietro Teodoro Giorni 15 September 1895 23 September 1938 was an Italian American pianist and composer After immigrating to the United States in 1914 he toured the nation as a soloist and with the Elshuco Trio He composed chamber music orchestral music etudes as well as a sonata for piano and violoncello 1 Aurelio GiorniGiorni c 1930sBackground informationBorn 1895 09 15 15 September 1895Perugia ItalyDied23 September 1938 1938 09 23 aged 43 Pittsfield Massachusetts U S GenresClassicalOccupation s Pianist Composer PedagogueInstrument s PianoLabelsDuo Art Brunswick Contents 1 Early life 2 Life in the U S 2 1 Death 3 Elshuco Trio 4 Piano Recordings Duo Art 5 Elshuco Trio Recordings Brunswick label 6 Compositions 6 1 Other works 7 External links 8 ReferencesEarly life editAurelio was born on September 15 1895 in Perugia Italy the first of two sons born to Carlo Giuseppe Giorni a Roman landscape painter and Linda Bergner Giorni an American mezzo soprano Aurelio was the great grandson of Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen Aurelio s parents had him tutored privately at home until at age 13 he attended Santa Cecilia Conservatory of Music and studied piano with Maestro Giovanni Sgambati and Ferruccio Busoni from 1909 to 1911 nbsp Aurelio Giorni portrait The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Music Division Muller Collection He performed joint recitals with his mother Linda as early as February 1908 when he was 12 years old 2 One such performance took place at the Hotel Excelsior in Rome on March 23 1911 The press notice read as follows 3 The Giorni Concert at the Hotel Excelsior attracted a very large number of ladies and gentlemen who are already aware of the unusual musical gifts possessed by Madame Linda Giorni amp her son Aurelio All the numbers of the program were well received and while the singing of Madame Giorni has been for several years the admiration of the Roman public the remarkable interpretation give by Aurelio Giorni only 15 years old and yet a composer of merit added much to the novelty and interest He played compositions by Bach Chopin Scarlatti and Sgambati in a manner which astonished and delighted the audience His success was all the more marked because an unfortunate accident had happened to the piano and the young musician was obliged to play without the use of the pedals Madame Giorni sang arie amp remanse by Haendel Sgambati Tschaikovsky Brahms amp Strauss as well as compositions by Aurelio Giorni who accompanied his mother on the piano Aurelio graduated from Santa Cecilia before he turned 15 enabling him to enter the Meisterschule fur Komposition Master School for Composition in Berlin in 1911 There he studied composition with German composer Engelbert Humperdinck and Russian born pianist conductor and composer Ossip Gabrilowitsch Aurelio was 16 when he returned to Rome to perform as a soloist There in 1912 Aurelio met his future wife Helen Emerson Miller Aurelio was known the wonder child of Carlo and Linda and was considered a remarkable pianist and composer at only 17 years old 4 Between 1913 and 1915 he toured Germany Switzerland the Netherlands and Scandinavia 5 Life in the U S editOn coming to America in the fall of 1914 Aurelio first stayed with his mother s sister Emma Bergner Sajous and her husband Charles E de M Sajous in Philadelphia When he moved it was to two residences one in New York City and one in Philadelphia the latter for convenience as he had a number of pupils there It was in New York City that he maintained his studio at 100 Carnegie Hall and renewed his acquaintance with the Miller family In 1918 after America entered World War I Aurelio enlisted at Fort Hamilton N Y exiting as a private in the U S Army This military service lasted just 6 months but would later hasten his eligibility for U S citizenship In 1919 he joined the Elshuco Trio and began concertizing in New York City and would perform with them over the next 15 years Aurelio was an active member of The Bohemians a New York Musicians Club that began in 1907 and continues to this day 6 Aurelio returned to Italy to visit his parents in the summer of 1919 and it was that autumn that he began making some 24 known piano rolls for the Duo Art reproducing piano nbsp The Giorni Family in 1929 In May 1920 Aurelio and Helen became engaged and they were married on January 1 1921 They had three daughters Helen Linda born in 1921 Yolanda Elisa born in 1924 and Aurelia Maria born in 1927 Death edit Friday September 23 1938 was the last day of the Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music and the last time Aurelio was seen alive It had been raining heavily due to the record hurricane of 1938 That Friday evening the family called the police to report him missing The next day the police called to say they d had a report that a young girl had seen a man answering his description jump off the Pomeroy Avenue bridge into the raging river and a pocketbook of his was found on the bridge A thorough search was conducted including combing the river for several days without success It was not until Helen talked to Aunt Hattie Mrs Charles Harrington an elderly clairvoyant she would visit who d been friends with her parents It was Aunt Hattie who saw Aurelio s suicide by water and it was she who described to Helen the location of Aurelio s body after several days in the river a place she had never visited When Helen relayed the information given her to the Pittsfield police they are able to find his body on September 30 in the Housatonic River 1000 feet south of the Pomeroy Avenue bridge 7 Aurelio may have been very discouraged and depressed He was notified just 10 days before his death that his services at Smith College would not be required for the coming term and was also disappointed when none of his compositions was given place on the South Mountain program nor was he among the festival performers Several months prior on April 25 Aurelio and his family went to Carnegie Hall for the first performance of his Symphony in D Minor being given that night by the National Orchestral Association under the leadership of conductor Leon Barzin Aurelio and Helen waited up past midnight for the New York reviews When Aurelio reads them he is very dejected The critic had indicated he never wanted to hear the symphony again Aurelio had no desire to compose afterwards Aurelio Giorni was laid to rest in the family plot at Rosedale Cemetery Orange New Jersey on October 3 1938 The service at All Angels Church was conducted by the rector George Trowbridge and the emeritus rector Reverend Townsend who knew Aurelio as a boy in Italy Aurelio s quartet was played by the Smith College quartet and several of his works were played on the organ by another friend Seth Bingham There was no singing but Laurens Seelye childhood friend of Helen read several poems which Aurelio set to music A Memorial Concert organized by Musicraft Records was later held at New York Town Hall on December 26 1938 The musicians were Max Hollaender violin Sterling Hunkins cello and Eugene Kusmiak piano performing the Trio in C Major a mastery of harmonic and contrapuntal technique characteristic of the composer s mature work Elshuco Trio edit nbsp The Elshuco Trio in 1929 The Elshuco Trio was formed in 1918 with founding members Samuel Gardner violin Willem Willeke violincello and Richard Epstein piano Willem Willeke was the leader and remained the only cellist throughout the group s existence The unusual first name was derived from the first syllables of the name of their patroness Elizabeth Shurtleff Coolidge 1864 1953 who established the Berkshire String Quartet in 1916 and started the Berkshire Chamber Music Festival at South Mountain Pittsfield Massachusetts in 1918 The group had its first public performance at Aeolian Hall in midtown Manhattan in New York City on October 31 1918 8 Aurelio joined the group in the summer of 1919 after Richard Epstein s death 9 Late in 1919 Reber Johnson also played with the group briefly 10 By 1920 Elias Breeskin had replaced Samual Gardner on violin 11 Elias Breeskin left in 1921 and was replaced by William Kroll the following year who stayed with the group until 1929 when he was replaced by Karl Kraeuter The Trio sometimes played for the annual Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music in South Mountain Pittsfield Massachusetts 12 Other known appearances reported where The last performance of the Elshuco Trio was their final concert of their 15th season on March 7 1933 in the United Engineering Societies auditorium New York and was augmented for the occasion by Conrad Held violinist The works played were the two Brahms piano quartets in A Major Op 26 and G Minor Op 25 13 Piano Recordings Duo Art editThe following list shows the known recordings Aurelio Giorni made for Duo Art beginning around 1919 14 Some of these piano rolls are in the archives of the University of Maryland Music Library Title Composer Catalog No Meditation Op 72 No 5 Tchaikovsky 5873 Etude Op 1 No 1 Schlozer 5886 Fruhlingsglaube Faith in Spring Schubert Liszt 5900 Toccata Op 18 No 4 Sgambati 5911 Murmuring Zephyrs Op 21 No 4 Jensen 5933 Nocturne Op 32 No 2 Chopin 5938 Songs without Words Op 53 No 1 Ab On the Seashore Mendelssohn 5951 D369 Pastorale Giorni 6026 Hark Hark The Lark Schubert Liszt 6052 Moment Musical Op 94 No 2 Schubert 6066 Petite Valse Op 28 No 1 Henselt 6090 Prelude in G Minor Op 23 No 5 Rachmaninoff 6125 Nutcracker Op 71 Dance of the Reed Flutes Tchaikovsky Esipoff 6132 The Trout Op 33 Schubert Heller 6176 Impromptu Op 90 No 3 Gb Schubert 6189 L Arlesienne Suite No 1 No 2 Minuetto Bizet 6237 Etude Op 10 No 8 F Chopin 6323 Etude Op 5 No 2 Pensez un peu a moi Henselt 6353 Staccato Etude Op 23 No 2 C A Rubinstein 6626 Impromptu Op 31 No 4 g Sinding 7021 Faschingsschwank aus Wien Op 26 No 4 Intermezzo Schumann 7022 Prelude Op 35 No 1 e Mendelssohn 7028 Fantasy Pieces Op 3 No 5 b b Serenade Rachmaninoff 7031 Songs without Words Op 53 No 19 Sinding 7033 Selections listed in the University of Maryland catalog The only other known commercial recording of a Giorni composition Musicraft Album No 33 published June 1939 This charmingly naive little Pastorale was written in 1908 when Aurelio then 13 years old had studied harmony counterpoint and composition for 4 years Elshuco Trio Recordings Brunswick label editThe following list provided by the Library of Congress Music Division in 1985 represents all the recordings made by the Elshuco Trio which are known to be extant at the time in 5 large American libraries There are three known early recordings which are not on this list Narcissus and Rosary by Nevin and one of the Hungarian Dances by Brahms Stanford University CST also has annotated copies of pages from the Brunswick catalogs of 1923 and 1925 where it is noted that these selections were chosen for popular appeal rather than a representative sampling of their repertoire Title Composer Issue Library Extase Ganne 10141 A NSY Spanish Dance Moszkowski 10141 B NSY Salut d amour Elgar 10142 A DLC NN NSY Serenade Widor 10142 B DLC NN NSY Autumn and Winter Glazunov 10144 A CST DLC Swedish Folk Song Svendsen 10144 B CST DLC Far niente C Cui 10146 A DLC Serenade Op 3 Victor Herbert 10146 B DLC Melody in D Faure 10148 A NN NSY Scherzo Reissiger 10148 B NN NSY Andante Op 9 Saint Saens 10149 A DLC NSY Scherzo Schubert 10149 B DLC NSY Elegia Arensa 10159 A CST Scherzo Brahms 10159 B CST Songs My Mother Taught Me Dvorak 10175 A DLC NN A Perfect Day Jacobs Bond 10175 B DLC NN Salut d amour Elgar 13008 A CST CTY Serenade Widor 13008 B CST CTY Autumn and Winter Glazunov 13032 A DLC Swedish Folk Song Svendsen 13032 B DLC Extase Ganne 13056 A NSY Spanish Dance Moszkowski 13056 B CST NN Far niente C Cui 13092 A CST DLC Serenade Op 3 Victor Herbert 13092 B CST DLC CST Stanford University CTY Yale University DLC Library of Congress NN New York Public Library NSY Syracuse University Re issuedCompositions editNOTE Early in 1969 Helen Giorni donated to 1 Exchange amp Gift Music Division Library of Congress and 2 New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Music Division all of Aurelio s music in her files whether published or not This was all cataloged and two lists were prepared one for each library The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts NYPLPA has numerous scores from the Giorni estate cataloged under call number JPB 83 61 15 Composition Year Publisher Source Comments Pastorale 1908 Duo Art catalog piano roll 60278 Sonata for violin amp piano 1911 Some Press Notices The Roman World March 4 1911 Three songs Du bist wie eine Blume Gretel Die Loreley 1911 Hotel Excelsior program March 23 1911 Opus 1 Theme and Variation in the Old Style 1913 Review in The Times of London May 6 1913 Canons 4 or 5 1920 Personal letters 2 and 3 June 1920 NYPLPA Wedding March dedicated To Helen 1920 Family knowledge manuscript retained Reported in wedding article So Orange NJ newspaper Jan 2 1921 Sonata in D Minor for violoncello and piano with alternate part for viola 1925 G Schirmer Inc New York c 1925 Theodore Presser Company PR 114403190 Symphonic poem Orlando Furioso for piano 4 hands 1926 NYPLPA Awakening two songs for high or medium voice and piano 1927 G Schirmer Inc New York c 1927 words by Edmund W Putnam 24 Concert Etudes in all the major and minor keys for piano 1927 G Schirmer Inc New York c 1927 16 Minuet and allegro in early romantic style for orchestra 1928 Composed for the Schubert Centenary in 1928 and arranged for the New York Chamber Music Society 2 Piano Phantasy 1929 Personal letter 39 Sonata in Eb Major for piano and flute 1932 George Barrere flute Prem Dec 17 1933 NYFC Steinway Hall New York Sonata in A Major for clarinet and piano 1933 J Green Music Hollywood CA NYPLPA UMD Library Score Collection Inventory G Trio in C Major for violin cello and piano 1934 Musicraft Records Inc New York audio recording 4 78rpm disks Margaritae Sorori based on poem by William Ernest Henley 1936 Family knowledge Trio for flute cello and piano 1936 News release NY College of Music March 12 1936 Quintet for flute violin viola cello and piano 1936 News release NY College of Music March 12 1936 Symphony in D Minor 1936 Performance by the National Orchestral Association Leon Barzin Conductor April 25 1938 Cradle Song for medium voice and piano G Schirmer Inc New York c 1941 words by Florence K Mixter Other works edit The following compositions are known to exist as part of the NYPLPA collection or others but for which the year they were written is uncertain Most of these were likely unpublished Aria for piano in F Major Concerto in D Major for pianoforte and orchestra Double fugue for piano 4 hands Fantasie sonata in A Minor Intermezzo in C Minor for flute violoncello and harp or piano Merry fugue in Eb for piano Six modal quatrains for female 4 part chorus The Music Makers for chorus SATB unaccompanied The Phantom Leaves song for mixed 4 part chorus a cappella or with string quartet accompaniment Rhapsody Diveretissement for piano oboe clarinet horn and bassoon Sonata in E Minor for piano and violin Sonata in D Minor for piano and violoncello or viola The Dreamer song for 4 part male chorus or quartet with 2 piano accompaniment Trio in Bb for piano violin and violoncello Variations Concertantes on The British Grenadiers for flute violin viola violoncello and harp or piano Zodiac Town 12 children s carols for 4 mixed voices a cappella or with piano accompaniment words by Nancy Byrd Turner Additionally the NYPLPA collection lists over two dozen songs with piano accompaniment not listed here many that contains words credited to several individuals External links editWorldCat Identity for Giorni Aurelio 1895 1938 30 works in 33 publications in 3 languages and 111 library holdings Duo Art rolls available at spencerserolls com played by Aurelio Giorni The Ellis Island Ship Database page showing Aurelio and Marcello returning from Italy on the Ryndam in September 1920 passengers 163 and 164 Aurelio Giorni on Facebook Piano Music for the Left Hand Alone G short bio References edit Howard John Tasker Our American Music Three Hundred Years of It Thomas Y Crowell Company New York 1939 Reported in Le Carnet Mondain of February 8 1908 and The Roman World of February 15 1908 The Roman World April 1st 1911 Aurelio Giorni s Concerts The New York Times Dec 22 1912 Alfred Remy Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Third Edition Harvard College Library G Schirmer 1919 p 1085 Who was Who in The Bohemians in 1921 Archived 2011 04 19 at the Wayback Machine March 2011 Body of Aurelio Giorni Pianist Found in River The Berkshire Eagle Sep 30 1938 Elshuco Trio Appears The New York Times November 1 1918 Richard Epstein s Funeral The New York Times Aug 5 1919 The World of Music and Musicians New York Tribune Oct 12 1919 page 11 Elshuco Trio Heard Again The New York Times Feb 20 1920 Concert Programmes Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music Elshuco Trio Ends Season The New York Times March 8 1933 page 18 Duo Art Piano Roll Catalog Archived 2012 12 02 at the Wayback Machine The Reproducing Piano Roll Foundation Albert M Petrak Editor 1998 Aurelio Giorni scores Music Division The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Call number JPB 83 61 24 Concert Etudes in all major and minor keys G Schirmer Inc New York c 1927 This article is largely based on the book The Broken Pedal A Biographical Sketch of Pianist Composer Aurelio Giorni 1895 1938 and His Family a privately published work by Elena G Burns daughter 1921 1998 during 1985 86 in Whittier California Although distribution was limited mainly to family members copies were also provided to the Library of Congress and the New York Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aurelio Giorni amp oldid 1147038426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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