fbpx
Wikipedia

Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini"

The Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini" is a music conservatory in Pesaro, Italy. Founded in 1869 with a legacy from the composer Gioachino Rossini, the conservatory officially opened in 1882 with 67 students and was then known as the Liceo musicale Rossini. By 2010 it had an enrollment of approximately 850 students studying for higher diplomas in singing, instrumental performance, composition, musicology, choral conducting, jazz or electronic music. The conservatory also trains music teachers for secondary schools and holds regular master classes. Its seat is the 18th century Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli on the Piazza Oliveri in Pesaro. Amongst its past Directors are the composers Carlo Pedrotti, Pietro Mascagni, Riccardo Zandonai and Franco Alfano. Mascagni's opera Zanetto had its world premiere at the conservatory in 1896.

Gioachino Rossini, whose legacy led to the founding of the conservatory

History edit

 
Carlo Pedrotti, the first Director of the conservatory

In his will, Rossini left virtually his entire estate to Pesaro, his native city, for the establishment of a free music school there with the provision that the legacy would only come to the city upon the death of his widow, Olympe Pélissier.[1] In 1869, the year following Rossini's death, the city set up the association which would eventually become the "Liceo musicale Rossini". Olympe Pélissier died in 1878. Four years later, on 5 November 1882, the school opened the doors of its temporary home in the former Convent and Church of San Filippo Neri to the first cohort of 67 students, of whom 25 were enrolled in the choral school.[2] Following the terms of Rossini's will, the school emphasised operatic and choral singing as well as composition. Its first Director, Carlo Pedrotti, was the composer of 17 operas and had previously been the Director of Turin's opera house, the Teatro Regio. He was also a noted voice teacher. Amongst his pupils were the tenors Francesco Tamagno and Alessandro Bonci. During Pedrotti's tenure, the conservatory moved to its permanent home in the Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli and an auditorium was added which now bears his name. Following Pedrotti's retirement in 1893, the conservatory was without a director until the appointment two years later, of another opera composer, Pietro Mascagni.

 
Pietro Mascagni in 1902, his final year as Director of the conservatory

Mascagni took up his post in December 1895. Thanks to Rossini's large legacy, the school was well endowed financially. Mascagni's annual salary was 12,000 lire, more than twice that of the much older Parma Conservatory, and was supplemented with a lavish rent-free apartment in the Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli.[3] Despite its large endowment, the conservatory had made little progress in raising its prestige during the Pedrotti years and was overshadowed by the big conservatories of Milan, Rome, and Naples and even the smaller Parma Conservatory. It had yet to produce any musicians of note and its enrollment had only increased from the initial 67 students to 73. Its location in a small sea-side town also made it relatively less attractive to the more gifted students and distinguished teachers who tended to prefer the conservatories located in major cultural centres.[3] Mascagni was eager to change the situation and to implement his own ideas about what conservatory education for young people should be. He was opposed to the methods used in many Italian conservatories at the time which taught music largely by rote memorization or as he put it, "like a catechism."[3] Within three years, Mascagni had started the Liceo Symphony Orchestra, which included both students and faculty and was the first permanent orchestra to be established in an Italian conservatory.[4] Mascagni himself conducted their concerts. The orchestra also played in the world premiere of his opera Zanetto, which he had completed shortly before taking up his post. Two students from the conservatory sang the leading roles, and went with Mascagni when he took the opera to La Scala. He also established the first conservatory-published music journal in Italy, La cronaca musicale, as well as the first conservatory course specifically devoted to sacred music.[4] Within four years, the faculty had grown and the enrollment had doubled, as had the number of diplomas awarded.

However, by 1900 Mascagni's relationship with the governing board of the school had begun to sour, partly due to his frequent absences for conducting tours and the preparations for the premiere of his opera Le maschere, and partly due to his abrasive treatment of local dignitaries. He had also run up fairly large deficits in the previous two years, and the board had taken over the financial management of the conservatory. Budget cuts in 1902 led to a student rebellion in support of Mascagni. In turn, the board closed the conservatory for the remainder of the year and sent the students home. On 20 January 1903, Mascagni was officially dismissed from his post.[5] It was another two years before a new director was appointed. In a 1903 address, the president of the governing board recommended that the next director not be an opera composer because an opera composer "in addition to being steeped in liberties, has his mind always focused on his own compositions and all of the interests that flow from them."[6]

In 1905, Amilcare Zanella, a pianist and composer of instrumental music was appointed as Mascagni's successor, a post he was to hold for the next 35 years.[7] With the appointment of Riccardo Zandonai as Director in 1940, the school was once again led by an opera composer. (Zandonai, whose most well-known opera is Francesca da Rimini, had been a pupil of Mascagni at the conservatory.) Under Zandonai, the governance of the Liceo passed from the city of Pesaro to the Italian Ministry of Education. Zandonai was followed by another opera composer, Franco Alfano, who held the Directorship from 1947 to 1950. The conservatory produced or participated in a number of opera productions during the 20th century, including Il barbiere di Siviglia (1916), La gazza ladra (1941), Le Comte Ory (1942) and later Orfeo ed Euridice, Suor Angelica, Gianni Schicchi, Il Signor Bruschino, Francesca da Rimini, and Dido and Aeneas.

In 1999 the school was designated by the Italian government as an "Istituto Superiore di Studi Musicali" (Higher Institute of Musical Studies) with university status, one which it holds to the present day.[8][9]

The 21st century conservatory edit

Following a vote by the faculty, the pianist Ludovico Bramanti became the new director of the conservatory in 2014, succeeding another pianist, Maurizio Tarsetti, who had held the post since 2008.[10] In the academic year 2009/2010, the conservatory had an enrollment of approximately 850 students. Of those, 821 were Italian with the remainder from 26 other countries as far afield as Peru, Nepal and Kazakhstan.[11] The conservatory offers bachelor and master diplomas in singing, instrumental performance, composition, musicology, choral conducting, jazz and electronic music. It also trains music teachers for secondary schools and holds regular master classes and seminars. Admission to the diploma courses is based on an entrance examination with five 1000 scholarships awarded annually by the Fondazione Rossini.

 
Fresco by Gianandrea Lazzarini in the Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli

The conservatory has three specialised research laboratories: 20th Century and Contemporary Music; Early Music; and Electronic and Experimental Music (LEMS), which was established in 1971 by the Italian composer Aldo Clementi. There are several permanent ensembles in which both students and faculty participate, including the Symphony Orchestra, Wind Orchestra, Jazz Orchestra, Saxophone Ensemble, and Gregorian Choir. The ensembles and soloists perform a variety of public concerts in Pesaro and the surrounding region during the year, including those celebrating Christmas, Easter, Ferragosto, May Day, Festa della Repubblica, and Saint Cecilia's Day. The conservatory also co-produces Progetto Orfeo, an international university festival of opera and musical theatre,[12] and runs two national music competitions, Harpsichord (established in 1991) and Bassoon (established in 2004).

Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli edit

The Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli on the Piazza Olivieri is home to both the conservatory and the Fondazione Rossini, a centre for Rossini scholarship which organizes the annual Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro. The neo-classical palazzo with its monumental central staircase was built in 1794 for Annibale Olivieri, a member of a noble Pesarese family. It was designed by Gianandrea Lazzarini, who also painted the frescos adorning several of the ceremonial rooms, now often used for chamber music concerts. It includes a gallery of illustrious men and women from Pesaro's history.[13][14] The building was acquired by the city of Pesaro in 1884, initially to house the Biblioteca Oliveriana and its collections, and gradually adapted by 1892 for use as a music conservatory, including an extension to accommodate an 800-seat concert hall, now known as the Sala Pedrotti. Rectangular in shape with a raised stage, stalls and two tiers of balconies, the Sala Pedrotti is one of the few "shoebox" concert halls in Italy and is known for its good acoustics.[15] It was inaugurated on 29 February 1892 with a concert conducted by Carlo Pedrotti to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Rossini's birth.

In addition to the concert hall, teaching rooms, and offices, the palazzo houses the conservatory's collection of antique and exotic musical instruments and its library. The conservatory library, with 45,000 volumes as well as rare manuscripts and documents dating back to 1500, is one of the largest music libraries in Italy.[16] The "Tempietto Rossiniano" (Little Temple to Rossini) on the piano nobile of the building has a ceiling decorated with Neo-Pompeian scenes of Ancient Rome. It contains many items that belonged to the composer as well as the autograph scores of his Petite messe solennelle and six operas, most of which he composed for the Teatro San Carlo in Naples: Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra, Otello, Armida, La donna del lago, Maometto II, and Adina. A large bronze statue of Rossini by Carlo Marochetti is situated in the building's main internal courtyard.[17]

Faculty members and alumni edit

 
Composer Franco Alfano, Director of the conservatory from 1947 to 1950

Faculty edit

Alumni edit

 
Alumnus Marco Ambrosini with his nyckelharpa

This list includes both graduates and musicians who are known to have studied for a time at the conservatory.

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Senici (2004) p. 24
  2. ^ The church, once the tallest building in Pesaro, and the attached convent on 44 Via Petrucci were closed in the mid-19th century and had been purchased by the City of Pesaro in 1862.
  3. ^ a b c Mallach (2002) p. 108
  4. ^ a b Mallach (2002) p. 109
  5. ^ Mallach (2002) p. 158
  6. ^ Tullio Cinotti, a local soap manufacturer and President of the governing board of the conservatory, quoted in Mallach (2002) p. 149
  7. ^ Waterhouse
  8. ^ Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini", Presentazione e storia 2010-10-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  9. ^ Angelucci (March 2004)
  10. ^ Bartolucci (14 March 2008)
  11. ^ Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca, Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini" 2010-11-21 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  12. ^ Programme: Progetto Orfeo 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine, 2009 (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  13. ^ Tourism office of Pesaro.
  14. ^ Peri
  15. ^ Fausti, Farina, and Pompoli (1995) pp. 453–456
  16. ^ Sistema Bibliotecario Unificato di Pesaro e Urbino, Biblioteca Conservatorio "G. Rossini" 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  17. ^ Touring club italiano (2002) pp. 38–39
  18. ^ The years of office for all Directors of the conservatory on this list are sourced from Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini", I Direttori 2010-11-12 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  19. ^ Pironti and Costa
  20. ^ Nello Vetro, Gaspare (ed), "Zanella, Amilcare, compositore" 2010-04-04 at the Wayback Machine, Dizionario della musica e dei musicisti dei territori del Ducato di Parma e Piacenza (online version), Istituzione Casa della Musica. See also it:Amilcare Zanella

Sources edit

  • Angelucci, Alberto, "Il Conservatorio di Pesaro: L'Università della musica", Lo Specchio della Città, March 2004 (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  • Bartolucci, Patrizia, "Maurizio Tarsetti batte 5 candidati: il Conservatorio ha un nuovo direttore", Il Resto del Carlino, 14 March 2008 (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  • Fausti, P., Farina, A., and Pompoli, R., , Proceedings of the International Commission for Acoustics Congress, Trondheim, 26–30 June 1995, Vol.II, pp. 453–456
  • Mallach, Alan, Pietro Mascagni and his operas, Northeastern University Press, 2002. ISBN 1-55553-524-0
  • Peri, Nino, , Fondazione Scavolini. (in Italian). Accessed 19 October 2010.
  • Pironti, Alberto & Costa, Roberta (2001). "Veretti, Antonio". In Sadie, Stanley & Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.
  • Senici, Emanuele, The Cambridge Companion to Rossini, Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-521-00195-1
  • Touring club italiano, Pesaro e Urbino e provincia: Gabicce, Fano e la costa Gradara e il Montefeltro, Touring Editore, 2002. ISBN 88-365-2432-X
  • Waterhouse, John C. G. (2001). "Zanella, (Castore) Amilcare". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56159-239-5.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Virtual tour of the Palazzo Olivieri–Machirelli

conservatorio, statale, musica, gioachino, rossini, music, conservatory, pesaro, italy, founded, 1869, with, legacy, from, composer, gioachino, rossini, conservatory, officially, opened, 1882, with, students, then, known, liceo, musicale, rossini, 2010, enroll. The Conservatorio Statale di Musica Gioachino Rossini is a music conservatory in Pesaro Italy Founded in 1869 with a legacy from the composer Gioachino Rossini the conservatory officially opened in 1882 with 67 students and was then known as the Liceo musicale Rossini By 2010 it had an enrollment of approximately 850 students studying for higher diplomas in singing instrumental performance composition musicology choral conducting jazz or electronic music The conservatory also trains music teachers for secondary schools and holds regular master classes Its seat is the 18th century Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli on the Piazza Oliveri in Pesaro Amongst its past Directors are the composers Carlo Pedrotti Pietro Mascagni Riccardo Zandonai and Franco Alfano Mascagni s opera Zanetto had its world premiere at the conservatory in 1896 Gioachino Rossini whose legacy led to the founding of the conservatory Contents 1 History 2 The 21st century conservatory 3 Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli 4 Faculty members and alumni 4 1 Faculty 4 2 Alumni 5 Notes and references 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Carlo Pedrotti the first Director of the conservatory In his will Rossini left virtually his entire estate to Pesaro his native city for the establishment of a free music school there with the provision that the legacy would only come to the city upon the death of his widow Olympe Pelissier 1 In 1869 the year following Rossini s death the city set up the association which would eventually become the Liceo musicale Rossini Olympe Pelissier died in 1878 Four years later on 5 November 1882 the school opened the doors of its temporary home in the former Convent and Church of San Filippo Neri to the first cohort of 67 students of whom 25 were enrolled in the choral school 2 Following the terms of Rossini s will the school emphasised operatic and choral singing as well as composition Its first Director Carlo Pedrotti was the composer of 17 operas and had previously been the Director of Turin s opera house the Teatro Regio He was also a noted voice teacher Amongst his pupils were the tenors Francesco Tamagno and Alessandro Bonci During Pedrotti s tenure the conservatory moved to its permanent home in the Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli and an auditorium was added which now bears his name Following Pedrotti s retirement in 1893 the conservatory was without a director until the appointment two years later of another opera composer Pietro Mascagni nbsp Pietro Mascagni in 1902 his final year as Director of the conservatory Mascagni took up his post in December 1895 Thanks to Rossini s large legacy the school was well endowed financially Mascagni s annual salary was 12 000 lire more than twice that of the much older Parma Conservatory and was supplemented with a lavish rent free apartment in the Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli 3 Despite its large endowment the conservatory had made little progress in raising its prestige during the Pedrotti years and was overshadowed by the big conservatories of Milan Rome and Naples and even the smaller Parma Conservatory It had yet to produce any musicians of note and its enrollment had only increased from the initial 67 students to 73 Its location in a small sea side town also made it relatively less attractive to the more gifted students and distinguished teachers who tended to prefer the conservatories located in major cultural centres 3 Mascagni was eager to change the situation and to implement his own ideas about what conservatory education for young people should be He was opposed to the methods used in many Italian conservatories at the time which taught music largely by rote memorization or as he put it like a catechism 3 Within three years Mascagni had started the Liceo Symphony Orchestra which included both students and faculty and was the first permanent orchestra to be established in an Italian conservatory 4 Mascagni himself conducted their concerts The orchestra also played in the world premiere of his opera Zanetto which he had completed shortly before taking up his post Two students from the conservatory sang the leading roles and went with Mascagni when he took the opera to La Scala He also established the first conservatory published music journal in Italy La cronaca musicale as well as the first conservatory course specifically devoted to sacred music 4 Within four years the faculty had grown and the enrollment had doubled as had the number of diplomas awarded However by 1900 Mascagni s relationship with the governing board of the school had begun to sour partly due to his frequent absences for conducting tours and the preparations for the premiere of his opera Le maschere and partly due to his abrasive treatment of local dignitaries He had also run up fairly large deficits in the previous two years and the board had taken over the financial management of the conservatory Budget cuts in 1902 led to a student rebellion in support of Mascagni In turn the board closed the conservatory for the remainder of the year and sent the students home On 20 January 1903 Mascagni was officially dismissed from his post 5 It was another two years before a new director was appointed In a 1903 address the president of the governing board recommended that the next director not be an opera composer because an opera composer in addition to being steeped in liberties has his mind always focused on his own compositions and all of the interests that flow from them 6 In 1905 Amilcare Zanella a pianist and composer of instrumental music was appointed as Mascagni s successor a post he was to hold for the next 35 years 7 With the appointment of Riccardo Zandonai as Director in 1940 the school was once again led by an opera composer Zandonai whose most well known opera is Francesca da Rimini had been a pupil of Mascagni at the conservatory Under Zandonai the governance of the Liceo passed from the city of Pesaro to the Italian Ministry of Education Zandonai was followed by another opera composer Franco Alfano who held the Directorship from 1947 to 1950 The conservatory produced or participated in a number of opera productions during the 20th century including Il barbiere di Siviglia 1916 La gazza ladra 1941 Le Comte Ory 1942 and later Orfeo ed Euridice Suor Angelica Gianni Schicchi Il Signor Bruschino Francesca da Rimini and Dido and Aeneas In 1999 the school was designated by the Italian government as an Istituto Superiore di Studi Musicali Higher Institute of Musical Studies with university status one which it holds to the present day 8 9 The 21st century conservatory editFollowing a vote by the faculty the pianist Ludovico Bramanti became the new director of the conservatory in 2014 succeeding another pianist Maurizio Tarsetti who had held the post since 2008 10 In the academic year 2009 2010 the conservatory had an enrollment of approximately 850 students Of those 821 were Italian with the remainder from 26 other countries as far afield as Peru Nepal and Kazakhstan 11 The conservatory offers bachelor and master diplomas in singing instrumental performance composition musicology choral conducting jazz and electronic music It also trains music teachers for secondary schools and holds regular master classes and seminars Admission to the diploma courses is based on an entrance examination with five 1000 scholarships awarded annually by the Fondazione Rossini nbsp Fresco by Gianandrea Lazzarini in the Palazzo Olivieri MachirelliThe conservatory has three specialised research laboratories 20th Century and Contemporary Music Early Music and Electronic and Experimental Music LEMS which was established in 1971 by the Italian composer Aldo Clementi There are several permanent ensembles in which both students and faculty participate including the Symphony Orchestra Wind Orchestra Jazz Orchestra Saxophone Ensemble and Gregorian Choir The ensembles and soloists perform a variety of public concerts in Pesaro and the surrounding region during the year including those celebrating Christmas Easter Ferragosto May Day Festa della Repubblica and Saint Cecilia s Day The conservatory also co produces Progetto Orfeo an international university festival of opera and musical theatre 12 and runs two national music competitions Harpsichord established in 1991 and Bassoon established in 2004 Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli editThe Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli on the Piazza Olivieri is home to both the conservatory and the Fondazione Rossini a centre for Rossini scholarship which organizes the annual Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro The neo classical palazzo with its monumental central staircase was built in 1794 for Annibale Olivieri a member of a noble Pesarese family It was designed by Gianandrea Lazzarini who also painted the frescos adorning several of the ceremonial rooms now often used for chamber music concerts It includes a gallery of illustrious men and women from Pesaro s history 13 14 The building was acquired by the city of Pesaro in 1884 initially to house the Biblioteca Oliveriana and its collections and gradually adapted by 1892 for use as a music conservatory including an extension to accommodate an 800 seat concert hall now known as the Sala Pedrotti Rectangular in shape with a raised stage stalls and two tiers of balconies the Sala Pedrotti is one of the few shoebox concert halls in Italy and is known for its good acoustics 15 It was inaugurated on 29 February 1892 with a concert conducted by Carlo Pedrotti to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Rossini s birth In addition to the concert hall teaching rooms and offices the palazzo houses the conservatory s collection of antique and exotic musical instruments and its library The conservatory library with 45 000 volumes as well as rare manuscripts and documents dating back to 1500 is one of the largest music libraries in Italy 16 The Tempietto Rossiniano Little Temple to Rossini on the piano nobile of the building has a ceiling decorated with Neo Pompeian scenes of Ancient Rome It contains many items that belonged to the composer as well as the autograph scores of his Petite messe solennelle and six operas most of which he composed for the Teatro San Carlo in Naples Elisabetta regina d Inghilterra Otello Armida La donna del lago Maometto II and Adina A large bronze statue of Rossini by Carlo Marochetti is situated in the building s main internal courtyard 17 Faculty members and alumni edit nbsp Composer Franco Alfano Director of the conservatory from 1947 to 1950 Faculty edit Marcello Abbado conductor and composer Director of the conservatory 1966 1973 18 Franco Alfano composer Director of the conservatory 1947 1950 Mario Bertoncini pianist and composer Riccardo Brengola violinist Aldo Clementi composer Giulio Fara musicologist Lino Liviabella composer and pianist Director of the conservatory 1953 1959 Elvira Mari Casazza opera singer Pietro Mascagni composer Director of the conservatory 1895 1902 Carmen Melis opera singer David Monacchi composer Professor of Electroacoustics 2009 present also an alumnus Luigi Mostacci pianist Carlo Pedrotti composer Director of the conservatory 1882 1892 Carlo Pedini composer Armando Pierucci composer also an alumnus Boris Porena composer Rito Selvaggi composer Director of the conservatory 1959 1963 also an alumnus Bruno Tommaso jazz composer and double bass player Antonio Veretti composer Director of the conservatory 1950 1952 19 Riccardo Zandonai composer Director of the conservatory 1940 1944 also an alumnus Amilcare Zanella composer and pianist Director of the conservatory 1905 1940 20 Alumni edit nbsp Alumnus Marco Ambrosini with his nyckelharpa This list includes both graduates and musicians who are known to have studied for a time at the conservatory Giuseppe Albanese pianist Marco Ambrosini composer and nyckelharpist Andrea Angelini organist and conductor Giovanni Antiga composer Georgi Atanasov composer nbsp Renata Tebaldi who studied singing at the conservatory under Carmen Melis Giuliano Bernardi opera singer Alessandro Bonci opera singer Celestina Boninsegna opera singer Franco Corelli opera singer Mario del Monaco opera singer Gioconda de Vito violinist Carlo Domeniconi guitarist and composer Mara Galassi harpist and musicologist Josip Hatze composer Agide Jacchia conductor Luca Lombardi composer Gianluca Luisi pianist Riz Ortolani composer Enrico Pace pianist Marcella Pobbe opera singer Luca Chiarabini clarinettista Francesco Balilla Pratella composer and musicologist Sergio Rendine composer Primo Riccitelli composer Renata Tebaldi opera singer Domenico Viglione Borghese opera singerNotes and references edit Senici 2004 p 24 The church once the tallest building in Pesaro and the attached convent on 44 Via Petrucci were closed in the mid 19th century and had been purchased by the City of Pesaro in 1862 a b c Mallach 2002 p 108 a b Mallach 2002 p 109 Mallach 2002 p 158 Tullio Cinotti a local soap manufacturer and President of the governing board of the conservatory quoted in Mallach 2002 p 149 Waterhouse Conservatorio Statale di Musica Gioachino Rossini Presentazione e storia Archived 2010 10 02 at the Wayback Machine in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Angelucci March 2004 Bartolucci 14 March 2008 Ministero dell Istruzione dell Universita e della Ricerca Conservatorio Statale di Musica Gioachino Rossini Archived 2010 11 21 at the Wayback Machine in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Programme Progetto Orfeo Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine 2009 in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Tourism office of Pesaro Peri Fausti Farina and Pompoli 1995 pp 453 456 Sistema Bibliotecario Unificato di Pesaro e Urbino Biblioteca Conservatorio G Rossini Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Touring club italiano 2002 pp 38 39 The years of office for all Directors of the conservatory on this list are sourced from Conservatorio Statale di Musica Gioachino Rossini I Direttori Archived 2010 11 12 at the Wayback Machine in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Pironti and Costa Nello Vetro Gaspare ed Zanella Amilcare compositore Archived 2010 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Dizionario della musica e dei musicisti dei territori del Ducato di Parma e Piacenza online version Istituzione Casa della Musica See also it Amilcare ZanellaSources editAngelucci Alberto Il Conservatorio di Pesaro L Universita della musica Lo Specchio della Citta March 2004 in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Bartolucci Patrizia Maurizio Tarsetti batte 5 candidati il Conservatorio ha un nuovo direttore Il Resto del Carlino 14 March 2008 in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Fausti P Farina A and Pompoli R The acoustics and restoration of Salone Pedrotti in Pesaro Proceedings of the International Commission for Acoustics Congress Trondheim 26 30 June 1995 Vol II pp 453 456 Mallach Alan Pietro Mascagni and his operas Northeastern University Press 2002 ISBN 1 55553 524 0 Peri Nino Dipinto murale di Gianandrea Lazzarini in palazzo Machirelli Olivieri di Pesaro Fondazione Scavolini in Italian Accessed 19 October 2010 Pironti Alberto amp Costa Roberta 2001 Veretti Antonio In Sadie Stanley amp Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Senici Emanuele The Cambridge Companion to Rossini Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 0 521 00195 1 Touring club italiano Pesaro e Urbino e provincia Gabicce Fano e la costa Gradara e il Montefeltro Touring Editore 2002 ISBN 88 365 2432 X Waterhouse John C G 2001 Zanella Castore Amilcare In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 External links editOfficial website Virtual tour of the Palazzo Olivieri Machirelli Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conservatorio Statale di Musica 22Gioachino Rossini 22 amp oldid 1197450750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.