VERDI, GIUSEPPE BIOGRAPHY(1813 - 1901)
Verdi dominated the world of Italian opera from
his first considerable success in 1842 with Nabucco until his final
Shakespearean operas Otello, staged at La Scala, Milan, in 1887, and Falstaff,
mounted at the same opera-house in 1893. His career coincided with the rise of
Italian nationalism and the unification of the country, causes with which he
was openly associated.
Operas
The best known of Verdi's 28 operas are Nabucco
(Nebuchadnezzar), Macbeth, Rigoletto, Il Trovatore, La
Traviata, Les Vpres Siciliennes (The Sicilian Vespers), Simon
Boccanegra, Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball), La Forza del
Destino (The Force of Destiny), Don Carlos, Aida, Otello
and Falstaff.
Church Music
In addition to settings of the Te Deum
and the Stabat Mater, Verdi wrote an impressive large scale setting of
the Requiem, its origin stemming from the death of Rossini in 1868 and
the death of the writer Manzoni. The Requiem is a work of operatic
magnificence, none the less moving for its theatrical elements. The Quattro
pezzi sacri (Four Sacred Pieces) were written at various times in Verdi's
later years. The first, 'Ave Maria sulla scala enigmatica', written in 1889,
was followed, on publication, by a 'Stabat mater', the 'Laudi alla Vergine
Maria', on a text from Dante, and a 'Te Deum' for double chorus and orchestra.
The Four Pieces were published in 1898.
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