Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Vittorio_Gui> ?p ?o }
- Vittorio_Gui abstract "Vittorio Gui (14 September 1885 – 16 October 1975) was an Italian conductor, composer, musicologist and critic.Gui was born in Rome in 1885. He graduated in humanities at the University of Rome and also studied composition at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia; his principal composition teachers were the noted composers Giacomo Setaccioli and Stanislao Falchi. His style was "impressionistic with characteristic Italian traits".Gui's opera David premiered in Rome in 1907; later that year, he made his professional conducting debut at the Teatro Adriano in Rome, leading Ponchielli's La Gioconda as a substitute. This led to invitations to conduct in Naples and Turin (he met Claude Debussy in Turin in 1911). In 1923, Arturo Toscanini invited him to conduct Salome by Richard Strauss as the season opener at La Scala in Milan. He conducted the Teatro Regio in Turin from 1925 to 1927; in his last year in Turin, he premiered his fairy-tale opera Fata Malerba there. (Other notable compositions included the cantata Cantico dei cantici ("Song of Songs") from 1921, and the symphonic poem Giulietta e Romeo (with voices, from 1902).)In 1928, Gui founded and conducted the Orchestra Stabile; he developed the organization of the orchestra into the 1933 Maggio Musicale Fiorentino or "Florence May Music Festival", which he led until 1943. At the festival he conducted unusual operas such as Verdi's Luisa Miller, Spontini's La vestale, Cherubini's Médée and Gluck's Armide.In 1933 Bruno Walter invited Gui to be guest conductor at the Salzburg Festival, and in 1936 Sir Thomas Beecham invited him to be a regular conductor at the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden. In 1948, he made his debut with the Glyndebourne Festival company, leading Mozart's Così fan tutte in the Carl Ebert production at the Edinburgh Festival. He served as the Glyndebourne Festival's Musical Director from 1951 to 1963, and as its "artistic counselor" from 1963 to 1965, when he made his last appearances there.Gui was particularly known for his conducting of the works of Brahms, of which he was said to be a leading conductor in Italy. In 1947, the 50th anniversary of Brahms's death, Gui conducted a complete cycle of Brahms's orchestral and choral works in that country. He was also known for conducting contemporary music and first performances; among works he premiered was Dallapiccola's first major composition, his Partita, in 1933.Vittorio Gui was also a prolific author and critic. Notable writings include his 1924 study of Boito's opera Nerone, an article on "Mozart in Italy" from 1955, and his collected essays, Battute d'aspetto (1946).Gui died in Florence in 1975, aged 90.".
- Vittorio_Gui birthDate "1885-09-14".
- Vittorio_Gui birthYear "1885".
- Vittorio_Gui deathDate "1975-10-16".
- Vittorio_Gui deathYear "1975".
- Vittorio_Gui thumbnail Vittorio_Gui.jpg?width=300.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageExternalLink 31439.htm.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageExternalLink interprete.asp?ID=88.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageID "4248843".
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageLength "6031".
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageOutDegree "77".
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageRevisionID "676334369".
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Accademia_Nazionale_di_Santa_Cecilia.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Agnes_von_Hohenstaufen.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Amilcare_Ponchielli.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Armide_(Gluck).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Arrigo_Boito.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Arturo_Toscanini.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Bruno_Walter.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Ebert.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:1885_births.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:1975_deaths.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Accademia_Nazionale_di_Santa_Cecilia_alumni.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Glyndebourne_Festival_Opera.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Italian_composers.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Italian_conductors_(music).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Italian_male_composers.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Italian_musicologists.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Music_directors_(opera).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musicians_from_Rome.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sapienza_University_of_Rome_alumni.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Christoph_Willibald_Gluck.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Debussy.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Composer.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Conducting.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Conductor_(music).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Così_fan_tutte.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Covent_Garden.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Ebe_Stignani.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Edinburgh_Festival.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Florence.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Franco_Corelli.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Fritz_Busch.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Gaspare_Spontini.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Giacomo_Setaccioli.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Giangiacomo_Guelfi.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Gioachino_Rossini.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Verdi.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Glyndebourne.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Glyndebourne_Festival.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Glyndebourne_Festival_Opera.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Brahms.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink John_Pritchard_(conductor).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink La_Gioconda_(opera).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink La_Scala.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink La_vestale.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Lucilla_Udovich.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Luigi_Cherubini.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Luigi_Dallapiccola.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Luisa_Miller.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Maggio_Musicale_Fiorentino.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Maria_Callas.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Milan.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Musicologist.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Musicology.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Médée_(Cherubini).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Nerone_(Boito).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Norma_(opera).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Parsifal.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Partita_(Dallapiccola).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Strauss.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Wagner.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Opera_House.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Philharmonic_Orchestra.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Salome_(opera).
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Salzburg_Festival.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Sapienza_University_of_Rome.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Sena_Jurinac.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Stanislao_Falchi.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Teatro_Adriano.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink The_Barber_of_Seville.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink The_Marriage_of_Figaro.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Beecham.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Un_ballo_in_maschera.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Vincenzo_Bellini.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLink File:Vittorio_Gui.jpg.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gui".
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageWikiLinkText "Vittorio Gui".
- Vittorio_Gui after John_Pritchard_(conductor).
- Vittorio_Gui before Fritz_Busch.
- Vittorio_Gui dateOfBirth "1885-09-14".
- Vittorio_Gui dateOfDeath "1975-10-16".
- Vittorio_Gui hasPhotoCollection Vittorio_Gui.
- Vittorio_Gui name "Gui, Vittorio".
- Vittorio_Gui shortDescription "Italian composer and conductor".
- Vittorio_Gui title Glyndebourne.
- Vittorio_Gui wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.