Francesco Cilea

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Francesco Cilea (July 26, 1866November 20, 1950) was an Italian opera composer.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born in Palmi near Reggio Calabria, Francesco Cilea gave early indication of an aptitude for music when at the age of four he heard a performance of Bellini's Norma and was greatly affected by it. He was sent to study music at the Conservatorio San Pietro a Maiella in Naples, where he quickly demonstrated his diligence and precocious talent, earning a gold medal from the Ministero della Pubblica Istruzione (Department of education).

At the end of his course of study at the Conservatorio San Pietro a Maiella, for his final examination he offered his opera Gina, which had a libretto by Enrico Golisciani, adapted from an old French play, Catherine, ou La Croix d'or by Baron Anne-Honoré-Joseph Duveyrier de Mélésville (1787—1865). This melodramma idilico was successfully performed in the college theatre, and it attracted the notice of the publishers Sonzogno, who arranged for a second production, at Florence, in 1892.

Sonzogno also then commissioned from Cilea La Tilda, a verismo opera in three short acts along the lines of Cavalleria Rusticana. With a libretto by Angelo Zanardini, La Tilda had a successful first performance in April 1892 at the Teatro Pagliano in Florence, and after performances in a number of Italian theatres, it arrived at the Vienna Exhibition on 24 September 1892, alongside other works from the firm of Sonzogno. The composer never showed much sympathy for this work, whose subject he reluctantly agreed to set to music in order to please Sonzogno and to avoid throwing away a rare professional opportunity. The loss of the orchestral score has prevented the modern revival of this work, whose fresh and catchy melodies can nevertheless be discovered in the transcription for voice and piano.

In 1897 (27 November), the Teatro Lirico in Milan saw the première of Cilea's third opera L'Arlesiana, based on the play by Alphonse Daudet, with a libretto by Leopoldo Marenco. From the cast there stood out the young Enrico Caruso, who performed with great success the 'Lamento di Federico', the romance which was to keep alive the memory of the opera even to the present day. In reality L'Arlesiana was a failure which Cilea, being convinced of the work's value, tried repeatedly to remedy, making drastic and detailed alterations throughout the remainder of his life. In the score which we hear today, it is hard to find a single bar which is completely unchanged from the original. The revised opera was however still not successful, apart from a brief period in the 1930s when it benefited from political support which the composer established through personal contact with Mussolini.

Again at the Teatro Lirico in Milan, in 1902 (6 November) the composer won an enthusiastic reception for Adriana Lecouvreur, a 4-act opera with a libretto by Arturo Colautti set in 18th century France and based upon a play by Eugène Scribe. Adriana Lecouvreur is the opera of Cilea which is best known to international audiences today, and it reveals the spontaneity of a melodic style drawn from the Neapolitan school combined with harmonic and tonal scoring influenced by recent examples of French music.

Cilea's last opera, premièred at La Scala in Milan in 1907 (15 April) under the baton of Arturo Toscanini, was 3-act tragedy Gloria, again with a libretto by Colautti, based on a play by Victorien Sardou. The opera was withdrawn after only two performances, and the failure of this work, even though the composer attempted a later revision, was enough to drive him to abandon the operatic stage for good. There are however indications of some later unfulfilled operatic projects, which survive as parts or sketches of libretti, such as Il ritorno dell'amore by Renato Simoni, Malena by Ettore Moschino, and La rosa di Pompei, also by Moschino (dated "Naples, 20 May 1924"). Some sources also refer to an opera of 1909, completed but never performed, called Il matrimonio selvaggio, but no copy of this survives and Cilea himself made no mention of it in his volumes of memoirs ("Ricordi").

The Calabrian composer continued however to compose chamber music, both vocal and instrumental, and symphonic music. In 1913 he produced a symphonic poem in honour of Giuseppe Verdi with verses by Sem Benelli, which was first performed at the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa. After this he devoted himself principally to education and became director of the Conservatorio Vincenzo Bellini in Palermo, and then the Conservatorio San Pietro a Maiella in Naples, where he ended his teaching career in 1936.

Cilea died on 20 November 1950 in Varazze, a town near Savona in Liguria which offered him honorary citizenship and where he spent the last years of his life. The Conservatorio di Musica and the Teatro Comunale of Reggio Calabria were renamed in his memory, and his native town of Palmi built for him a Mausoleum, decorated with scenes from the myth of Orpheus.

[edit] Works

Operas

  • Gina (9.2.1889 Teatro Conservatorio S. Pietro alla Majella, Naples).
  • La Tilda (7.4.1892 Teatro Pagliano, Florence).
  • L'arlesiana (27.11.1897 Teatro Lirico, Milan).
  • L'arlesiana [revision] (22.10.1898 Milan)
  • Adriana Lecouvreur (6.11.1902 Teatro Lirico, Milan).
  • Gloria (15.4.1907 Teatro alla Scala, Milan).
  • L'Arlesiana [second revision] (1910)
  • Gloria [rev] (1932)
  • L'Arlesiana [third revision] (1937)

Other works

  • Foglio d'album op. 41
  • Gocce di rugiada
  • L'arcolaio
  • Melodia in fa maggiore
  • Poema Sinfonico in onore di G. Verdi
  • Romanza in la maggiore
  • Sonata in re maggiore op. 38 per violoncello e pianoforte
  • Valzer in re bemolle maggiore

[edit] Bibliography

  • La dolcissima effigie. Studi su Francesco Cilea; a cura di Gaetano Pitarresi. (Reggio Calabria, Laruffa, 1994), (reprinted 1999).
  • Francesco Cilea : documenti e immagini; a cura di Maria Grande. (Reggio Calabria : Laruffa, 2001). ISBN 88-7221-172-7 .
  • Francesco Cilea e il suo tempo: Atti del Convegno Internazionale di Studi (Palmi-Reggio Calabria, 20-22 ottobre 2000), a cura di Gaetano Pitarresi. (Reggio Calabria, Edizioni del Conservatorio di Musica "F. Cilea", 2002).

[edit] External links