Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7878819> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 74 of
74
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7878819 description "Italian musician".
- Q7878819 description "Italian musician".
- Q7878819 subject Q6561705.
- Q7878819 subject Q6646663.
- Q7878819 subject Q7026751.
- Q7878819 subject Q7028531.
- Q7878819 subject Q7193565.
- Q7878819 subject Q8558144.
- Q7878819 abstract "Ulderico Marcelli, also known as Rico Marcelli (October 3, 1882 – August 17, 1962), was a 20th-century Italian composer who became known in the United States for writing operas and musical accompaniment for dramatic performances, and for his skill as an orchestra conductor. Called "Rico" by his friends, Marcelli was born in Rome, then was raised in Chile and educated at the conservatory in Santiago, the capital. Marcelli went to Ecuador in 1900 to teach at the conservatory in Quito, but was disliked by his students, many of whom transferred to study with conservatory Director Domenico Brescia. However, his renown as a skilled violin player grew.Marcelli married a woman named Clementina (1879–1956); the couple had two daughters, Aida and Gloria Emma, the second born in 1906. On January 26, 1910, Marcelli and his family, accompanied by his sister Julia Marcelli, arrived in San Francisco. By 1913, Marcelli was a member of the French horn section at the San Francisco Symphony as well as concert master for "Demetrio's Venetian Orchestra of Soloists", a well-regarded "cafe orchestra."Marcelli's friend Brescia moved to San Francisco in 1914. In 1915 at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, Marcelli conducted the Exposition Orchestra. At the close of 1918, he was conducting at the T&D Theater in Oakland, and had "every lover of good music in Alameda County worshipping at his shrine." In 1919, Brescia described for Marcelli his work for the Bohemian Club as the composer for the summer musical theater at the Bohemian Grove. Brescia and Marcelli gave a concert called "Midsummer Music of Bohemia" at the Tivoli Theatre in San Francisco, with Brescia conducting selections from his Bohemian Club score, and Marcelli leading two movements from his Water Colors. Marcelli joined the Bohemian Club.In 1920, Marcelli wrote the first of an eventual six Grove Plays for the Bohemian Club, the last in 1961. As well in 1920, Marcelli began conducting the house orchestra for silent film showings at the Tivoli Theatre, a position he kept until he was hired away by Sid Grauman in 1922. Marcelli arranged the official musical accompaniment for the silent film Salomé in 1923. Grauman used Marcelli in his various Los Angeles, California theaters until the advent of sound in the movies in the late 1920s removed a great number of musicians from their steady jobs. Marcelli worked in radio broadcasting as the first bandleader of the Fibber McGee and Molly show, during the years 1935–1936, and he directed the Rico Marcelli Symphony Orchestra in a series of outdoor concerts at Grant Park Band Shell in Chicago in the late 1930s and 1940s, with as many as 165,000 people showing up for a 1940 performance in which Marcelli's orchestra backed singer Paul Robeson.On Christmas Day in 1937, Marcelli married a second time, to the soloist violin player of the Fibber McGee band, Audrey Call. The couple had one son, Victor Ottavio Marcelli, who joined the Bohemian Club in his adulthood.In his leisure, Marcelli painted in oils, mostly landscapes. Two were exhibited at the Bohemian Club in 1922: "Cabeza de Estudio" and "A Bit of Old California."Marcelli died in Sunland, Los Angeles, California on August 17, 1962, survived by his wife Audrey Call Marcelli. She died on June 3, 2001 in Sonoma, California, and left as a memorial the Audrey Call Marcelli Music Scholarship, awarded annually to one student at Santa Rosa Junior College.".
- Q7878819 birthDate "1882-10-03".
- Q7878819 birthYear "1882".
- Q7878819 deathDate "1962-08-17".
- Q7878819 deathYear "1962".
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=6M1IAAAAIAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=JXAFAAAAMAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=OMjUPQAACAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=QBazGQAACAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=izNDAAAAIAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageExternalLink books?id=u3cFAAAAMAAJ.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q1091018.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q1297.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q1344.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q1389098.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q159085.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q163759.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q17042.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q2115816.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q220.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q226730.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q250578.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q273233.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q2887.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q2900.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q298.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q3503914.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q36834.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q38.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q4353903.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q4355416.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q62.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q65.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q6561705.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q6572526.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646663.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q6989196.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q7026751.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028531.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q7193565.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q736.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q7419896.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q8558144.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q890783.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q933993.
- Q7878819 wikiPageWikiLink Q993313.
- Q7878819 dateOfBirth "1882-10-03".
- Q7878819 dateOfDeath "1962-08-17".
- Q7878819 name "Marcelli, Ulderico".
- Q7878819 shortDescription "Italian musician".
- Q7878819 type Person.
- Q7878819 type Agent.
- Q7878819 type Person.
- Q7878819 type Agent.
- Q7878819 type NaturalPerson.
- Q7878819 type Thing.
- Q7878819 type Q215627.
- Q7878819 type Q5.
- Q7878819 type Person.
- Q7878819 comment "Ulderico Marcelli, also known as Rico Marcelli (October 3, 1882 – August 17, 1962), was a 20th-century Italian composer who became known in the United States for writing operas and musical accompaniment for dramatic performances, and for his skill as an orchestra conductor. Called "Rico" by his friends, Marcelli was born in Rome, then was raised in Chile and educated at the conservatory in Santiago, the capital.".
- Q7878819 label "Ulderico Marcelli".
- Q7878819 givenName "Ulderico".
- Q7878819 name "Marcelli, Ulderico".
- Q7878819 name "Ulderico Marcelli".
- Q7878819 surname "Marcelli".