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GIOVANNI See also: Italian contrabassist and musical composer, was See also: born at See also: Crema in See also: Lombardy on the 24th of See also: December 1823
.
He studied See also: music at the Milan Conservatoire, devoting himself especially to the See also: double-See also: bass, an instrument with which his name is principally associated
.
On leaving Milan he spent some See also: time in See also: America and also occupied the position of See also: principal double-bass in the theatre at See also: Havana
.
Here his first See also: opera, Cristoforo See also: Colombo, was produced in 1847
.
In 1849 he made his first appearance in See also: England, playing double-bass solos at one of the Musical Union concerts
.
After this he made frequent visits to England, and his extraordinary command of his unwieldy instrument gained him See also: great popularity in See also: London and the provinces
.
Apart from his triumphs as an executant, See also: Bottesini was a conductor of See also: European reputation, and earned some success as a composer, though his See also: work had not sufficient individuality to survive the changes of taste and fashion
.
He was conductor at the Theatre See also: des Italiens in See also: Paris from 1855 to 1857, where his second opera, L'Assedio di Firenze, was produced
at See also: Barcelona
.
During these years he diversified the toils of conducting by repeated concert See also: tours through the principal countries of See also: Europe
.
In 1871 he conducted a season of Italian opera at the See also: Lyceum theatre in London, during which his opera See also: Ali Baba was produced, and at the close of the See also: year he was chosen by Verdi to conduct the first performance of Aida, which took place at Cairo on 27th December 1871
.
Bottesini wrote three operas besides those already mentioned: Il See also: Diavolo della Notte (Milan, 1859); Vinciguerra (Paris, 1870); and Ero e Leandro (See also: Turin, 1880), the last named to a libretto by Arrigo See also: Boito, which was subsequently set by Mancinelli
.
He also wrote The Garden of Olivet, a devotional See also: oratorio (libretto by See also: Joseph See also: Bennett), which was produced at the Norwich festival in 1887, a concerto for the double-bass, and numerous songs and minor instrumental pieces
.
Bottesini died at See also: Parma on the 7th of See also: July 1889
.
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[back] CARLO GIUSEPPE GUGLIELMO BOTTA (1766–1837) |
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