Gioachino Rossini

Gioachino Rossini

Photograph by Étienne Carjat, 1865
Born 29 February 1792
Pesaro, Papal States of Italy
Died 13 November 1868(1868-11-13) (aged 76)
Passy, Paris
Occupation Composer
Signature

Gioachino Antonio Rossini[1][2] (Italian: [dʒoaˈkiːno anˈtɔːnjo rosˈsiːni]; 29 February 1792  13 November 1868) was an Italian composer who wrote operas, as well as some sacred music, songs, chamber music and piano pieces.

A precocious composer of operas, he made his full debut at the age of eighteen (with La cambiale di matrimonio). His best-known operas include the Italian comedies Il barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville), L'italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers) and La Cenerentola (Cinderella). He also wrote a string of serious operas in Italian, including works such as Tancredi, Otello and Semiramide. The semi-serious opera La Gazza Ladra (The Thieving Magpie) has one of Rossini's most celebrated overtures. After moving to Paris in 1824, he eventually started to write in French. His last opera, the epic Guillaume Tell (William Tell), replete with its iconic overture, helped usher in grand opera in France.

After composing thirty-nine significant operas in nineteen years Rossini retired from the theatre in 1829. Later, he was affected by both physical and mental illnesses and for decades wrote relatively little apart from a setting of the Stabat Mater. A return to Paris from Italy in 1855 was followed by better health and the provision of exclusive musical and culinary soirées. During these, he presented salon music in the form of songs, piano pieces and small chamber ensembles that he called "Sins of Old Age". He considered the last of these "Sins" to be the unusually scored Petite messe solennelle (Little solemn mass) that he wrote in 1863.

Rossini had been the most popular opera composer in history,[3] and he was one of the most renowned public figures of his time.[4] A rapid and prolific composer, he was quoted as joking, "Give me the laundress' bill and I will even set that to music."[5] A tendency for inspired, song-like melodies is evident throughout his scores, earning him the nickname "The Italian Mozart."[6] Use of an exciting build up of orchestral sound over a repeated phrase—commonly known as a "Rossini crescendo"—also prompted the nickname "Signor Crescendo".

Early life

Portrait of Rossini as a young man

Gioachino Antonio Rossini was born into a family of musicians in Pesaro, a town on the Adriatic coast of Italy that was then part of the Papal States. His father, Giuseppe, was a horn player and inspector of slaughterhouses. His mother, Anna, was a singer and a baker's daughter.

Rossini's father was sympathetic to the French Revolution and welcomed Napoleon's troops when they arrived in northern Italy. When Austria restored the old regime, Rossini's father was sent to prison in 1799, where he remained until June 1800.[7] Rossini's mother took him to Bologna, making a living as leading singer at various theatres of the Romagna region. Her husband would ultimately join her in Bologna. During this time, Rossini was frequently left in the care of his aging grandmother, who had difficulty supervising the boy.

He remained at Bologna in the care of a pork butcher while his father played the horn in the orchestras of the theatres at which his wife sang. The boy had three years of instruction in the playing of the harpsichord from Giuseppe Prinetti, originally from Novara, who played the scale with two fingers only; Prinetti also owned a business selling beer and had a propensity to fall asleep while standing. These qualities made him a subject for ridicule in the eyes of the young Rossini.[8]

Education

He was eventually taken from Prinetti and apprenticed to a blacksmith. In Angelo Tesei, he found a congenial music master, and learned to sight-read, play accompaniments on the piano and sing well enough to take solo parts in the church when he was ten years of age. Important products of this period are six sonate a quattro, or string sonatas, composed in three days, unusually scored for two violins, cello and double bass. The original scores, dating from 1804 when the composer was twelve, were found in the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. Often transcribed for string orchestra, these sonatas reveal the young composer's affinity for Haydn and Mozart, already showing signs of operatic tendencies, punctuated by frequent rhythmic changes and dominated by clear, songlike melodies.

In 1805, he appeared at the theatre of the Commune in Ferdinando Paer's Camilla, his only public appearance as a singer. He was also a capable horn player, treading in the footsteps of his father. Around this time, he composed individual numbers to a libretto by Vincenza Mombelli called Demetrio e Polibio, which was handed to the boy in pieces. Though it was Rossini's first opera, written when he was thirteen or fourteen, the work was not staged until the composer was twenty years old, premiering as his sixth official opera.

In 1806, Rossini became a cello student under Cavedagni at the Conservatorio di Bologna. The following year he was admitted to the counterpoint class of Padre Stanislao Mattei (1750–1825). He learned to play the cello with ease, but the pedantic severity of Mattei's views on counterpoint served only to drive the young composer's views toward a freer school of composition. His insight into orchestral resources is generally ascribed not to the strict compositional rules that he learned from Mattei, but to knowledge gained independently while scoring the quartets and symphonies of Haydn and Mozart. At Bologna, he was known as "il Tedeschino" ("the Little German") on account of his devotion to Mozart.

Career as a composer

Early years: Demetrio e Polibio (1812) to Torvaldo e Dorliska (1815)

Through the friendly interposition of the Marquis Cavalli, his first opera, La cambiale di matrimonio (The Marriage Contract), was produced at Venice when he was a youth of 18 years. Two years before this he had already received the prize at the Conservatorio of Bologna for his cantata Il pianto d'Armonia sulla morte d'Orfeo. Between 1810 and 1813 at Bologna, Rome, Venice and Milan, Rossini produced operas of varying success, most notably La pietra del paragone and Il signor Bruschino, with its brilliant and unique overture. In 1813, Tancredi and L'italiana in Algeri were even bigger successes, and catapulted the 20-year-old composer to international fame.

The libretto for Tancredi was an arrangement by Gaetano Rossi of Voltaire's tragedy Tancrède. Traces of Ferdinando Paer and Giovanni Paisiello were undeniably present in fragments of the music. But any critical feeling on the part of the public was drowned by appreciation of such melodies as "Di tanti palpiti... Mi rivedrai, ti rivedrò", which became so popular that the Italians would sing it in crowds at the law courts until called upon by the judge to desist.

Gioachino Rossini, c. 1815 (portrait by Vincenzo Camuccini)

By the age of 21, Rossini had established himself as the idol of the Italian opera public. He continued to write operas for Venice and Milan during the next few years, but their reception was tame and in some cases unsatisfactory after the success of Tancredi. In 1815 he retired to his home in Bologna, where Domenico Barbaia, the impresario of the Naples theatre, contracted an agreement that made him musical director of the Teatro di San Carlo and the Teatro del Fondo at Naples. He would compose one opera a year for each. His payment was to be 200 ducats per month; he was also to receive a share from the gambling tables set in the theatre's "ridotto", amounting to about 1000 ducats per annum. This was an extraordinarily lucrative arrangement for any professional musician at that time.

He visited the Naples conservatory, and, although less than four years senior to Mercadante, he said to the Director Niccolò Zingarelli, "My compliments Maestro—your young pupil Mercadante begins where we finish."[9]

Some older composers in Naples, notably Zingarelli and Paisiello, were inclined to intrigue against the success of the youthful composer, but all hostility was rendered futile by the enthusiasm that greeted the court performance of his Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra, in which Isabella Colbran, who subsequently became the composer's wife, took a leading part. The libretto of this opera by Giovanni Schmidt was in many of its incidents an anticipation of those presented to the world a few years later in Sir Walter Scott's Kenilworth. The opera was the first in which Rossini wrote out the ornaments of the arias instead of leaving them to the fancy of the singers, and also the first in which the recitativo secco was replaced by a recitative accompanied by a string quartet.

Resounding success of The Barber of Seville (1816)

Isabella Colbran

Rossini's most famous opera was produced on 20 February 1816, at the Teatro Argentina in Rome. The libretto, a version of Pierre Beaumarchais' stage play Le Barbier de Séville, was newly written by Cesare Sterbini and not the same as that already used by Giovanni Paisiello in his own Barbiere, an opera which had enjoyed European popularity for more than a quarter of a century. Much is made of how quickly Rossini's opera was written, scholarship generally agreeing upon two or three weeks. Later in life, Rossini claimed to have written the opera in only twelve days. It was a colossal failure when it premiered as Almaviva; Paisiello's admirers were extremely indignant, sabotaging the production by whistling and shouting during the entire first act. However, not long after the second performance, the opera became so successful that the fame of Paisiello's opera was transferred to Rossini's, to which the title The Barber of Seville passed as an inalienable heritage.

Later in 1822, a 30-year-old Rossini succeeded in meeting Ludwig van Beethoven, who was then aged 51, deaf, cantankerous and in failing health. Communicating in writing, Beethoven noted: "Ah, Rossini. So you're the composer of The Barber of Seville. I congratulate you. It will be played as long as Italian opera exists. Never try to write anything else but opera buffa; any other style would do violence to your nature."[3]

Middle years: La gazzetta (1816) to Semiramide (1823)

Gioachino Rossini in 1820, International Museum and Library of Music, Bologna

Between 1815 and 1823 Rossini produced 20 operas. Of these, Otello formed the climax to his reform of serious opera (opera seria), and offers a suggestive contrast with the treatment of the same subject at a similar point of artistic development by the composer Giuseppe Verdi. In Rossini's time, the tragic ending was so distasteful to the public of Rome that it was necessary to invent a happy conclusion to Otello.

Conditions of stage production in 1817 are illustrated by Rossini's acceptance of the subject of Cinderella for a libretto only on the condition that the supernatural element should be omitted. The opera La Cenerentola was as successful as Barbiere. The absence of a similar precaution in construction of his Mosè in Egitto led to disaster in the scene depicting the passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea, when the defects in stage contrivance always raised a laugh, so that the composer was at length compelled to introduce the chorus "Dal tuo stellato soglio" to divert attention from the dividing waves.

In 1822, four years after the production of this work, Rossini married the renowned opera singer Isabella Colbran. In the same year, he moved from Italy to Vienna, where his operas were the rage of the audiences. He directed his Cenerentola in Vienna, where Zelmira was also performed. After this he returned to Bologna, but an invitation from Metternich to the Congress of Verona to "assist in the general re-establishment of harmony" was too tempting to refuse, and he arrived at the Congress in time for its opening on 20 October 1822. Here he made friends with Chateaubriand and Dorothea Lieven. The opera Semiramide was first performed at La Fenice in Venice on 3 February 1823. It was Rossini's last Italian opera.

In 1823, at the suggestion of the manager of the King's Theatre, London, he came to Britain, being much fêted on his way through Paris. He was given a generous welcome, which included an introduction to King George IV and the receipt of £7000 (£570000 today) after a residence of five months. The next year, he became musical director of the Théâtre des Italiens in Paris at a salary of £800 (£63000 today) per annum. Rossini's popularity in Paris was so great that Charles X gave him a contract to write five new operas a year, and at the expiration of the contract, he was to receive a generous pension for life.

Composing for Paris: Il viaggio a Reims (1825) to Guillaume Tell (1829)

Rossini in 1829
(lithography by Charlet Ory)

During his Paris years, Rossini created the comic operas Le comte Ory and Guillaume Tell (William Tell). The production of the latter in 1829 brought his career as a writer of opera to a close. Fabio Luisi said that Rossini planned for Guillaume Tell to be his last opera even as he composed it.[10] He was thirty-eight years old and had already composed thirty-eight operas. Guillaume Tell was a political epic adapted from Schiller's play Wilhelm Tell (1804) about the 13th-century Swiss patriot who rallied his country against the Austrians. The libretto was by Étienne Jouy and Hippolyte Bis, but their version was revised by Armand Marrast.[11]

The music is remarkable for its freedom from the conventions discovered and utilized by Rossini in his earlier works, and marks a transitional stage in the history of opera, the overture serving as a model for romantic overtures throughout the 19th century. Though an excellent opera, it is rarely heard uncut today, as the original score runs more than four hours in performance. The overture is one of the most famous and frequently recorded works in the classical repertoire.

In 1829 he returned to Bologna. His mother had died in 1827, and he was anxious to be with his father. Arrangements for his subsequent return to Paris on a new agreement were temporarily upset by the abdication of Charles X and the July Revolution of 1830. Rossini, who had been considering the subject of Faust for a new opera, did return, however, to Paris in November of that year.

Six movements of his Stabat Mater[12] were written in 1832 by Rossini himself and the other six by Giovanni Tadolini, a good musician who was asked by Rossini to complete the work. However, Rossini composed the rest of the score in 1841. The success of the work bears comparison with his achievements in opera, but his comparative silence during the period from 1832 to his death in 1868 makes his biography appear almost like the narrative of two lives—the life of swift triumph and the long life of seclusion, of which biographers give us pictures in stories of the composer's cynical wit, his speculations in fish mongering,[13] his mask of humility and indifference.

In Paris: the later years

Gioachino Rossini (photo by Félix Nadar, c. 1856)

His first wife died in 1845, and on 16 August 1846, he married Olympe Pélissier, who had sat for Vernet for his picture of Judith and Holofernes. Political disturbances compelled Rossini to leave Bologna in 1848. After living for a time in Florence, he settled in Paris in 1855, where he hosted many artistic and literary figures in his apartment at 2 Rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin,[14] among whom the forty years younger Belgian mattauphone virtuoso Edmond Michotte,[15] considering him as his quasi figlio.

Rossini had been a well-known gourmand and an excellent amateur chef his entire life, but he indulged these two passions fully once he retired from composing, and today there are a number of dishes with the appendage "alla Rossini" to their names that were created either by or specifically for him. Probably the most famous of these is tournedos Rossini, still served by many restaurants today.

In the meantime, after years of various physical and mental illnesses, he had slowly returned to music, composing obscure little works intended for private performance. These included his Péchés de vieillesse ("Sins of Old Age"), which are grouped into 14 volumes, mostly for solo piano, occasionally for voice and various chamber ensembles. Often whimsical, these pieces display Rossini's natural ease of composition and gift for melody, showing obvious influences of Beethoven and Chopin, with many flashes of the composer's long buried desire for serious, academic composition. They also underpin the fact that Rossini himself was an outstanding pianist whose playing attracted high praise from people such as Franz Liszt, Sigismond Thalberg, Camille Saint-Saëns and Louis Diémer.[16]

He died at the age of 76 from pneumonia at his country house at Passy on Friday, 13 November 1868. He was buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France. In 1887, his remains were moved to the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence, at the request of the Italian government.

Legacy

According to Herbert Weinstock's 1968 biography,[17] the composer's estate was valued at 2.5 million francs upon his death in 1868, the equivalent of about 1.4 million US dollars. According to one contemporary account, at the time of Rossini's death, his estate yielded revenues of 150,000 francs per year.[18] Apart from some individual legacies in favour of his wife and relatives,[19] Rossini willed his entire estate to the Comune of Pesaro.[20] The inheritance was invested to establish a Liceo Musicale (Conservatory) in the town. In 1940, the Liceo was put under state control and turned into the Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini". The corporate body which managed Rossini's inheritance assumed the name Fondazione G. Rossini. The aims of the institution, which is still active, are to support the conservatory and promote the figure, the memory, and the works of Rossini. The institution has been a major sponsor of the Rossini Opera Festival since its beginning.[21]

Rossini's estate funded the Prix Rossini, a prize awarded to young French composers and librettists. The prize began to be awarded in 1878 on the death of his widow and is given by the Académie des Beaux-Arts. Prize-winning works were produced by the Société des Concerts, Institut de France, from 1885 to 1911.[22] The bequest sought to reward composers of music which emphasized melody, which Rossini wrote "today is neglected" ("melodia, oggi si trascurata"). The prize for librettists was to be given to writers who observed "the laws of morality, which the modern writers completely ignore" ("osservando le leggi della morale di cui i moderni scrittori piu non tengono verun conto"). The prizes were exclusively for French composers and librettists ("exclusivamente per I Francesi").[23]

Honors and tributes

Rossini's now-empty tomb at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris
Rossini's final resting place, in the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence

Rossini was a foreign associate of the institute, Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour and recipient of innumerable orders.

Immediately after Rossini's death, Giuseppe Verdi proposed to collaborate with twelve other Italian composers on a Requiem for Rossini, to be performed on the first anniversary of Rossini's death, conducted by Angelo Mariani. The music was written, but the performance was abandoned shortly before its scheduled premiere. Verdi re-used the "Libera me, Domine" he had written for the Rossini Requiem in his 1872 Requiem for Manzoni. In 1989 the conductor Helmuth Rilling recorded the original Requiem for Rossini in its world premiere.

In 1900, Giuseppe Cassioli created a monument to Rossini in the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence.[24]

Edmond Michotte fund

The Library of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels possesses an important collection of scores, documents and objects from Rossini, assembled in the Edmond Michotte fund.

Rossiniana

Mauro Giuliani (who died in 1829) wrote six sets of variations for guitar on themes by Rossini, Opp. 119–124 (c. 1820–1828). Each set was called "Rossiniana", and collectively they are called "Rossiniane". This was the first known tribute by one composer to another using a title with the ending -ana.

In 1925, Ottorino Respighi orchestrated four pieces from Péchés de vieillesse as the suite Rossiniana (he had earlier used pieces from the same collection as the basis of his ballet La Boutique fantasque).

Music

According to the Oxford History of Western Music, "Rossini's fame surpassed that of any previous composer, and so, for a long time, did the popularity of his works. Audiences took to his music as if to an intoxicating drug—or, to put it more decorously, to champagne, with which Rossini's bubbly music was constantly compared."[25]

Rossini took existing operatic genres and forms and perfected them in his own style. Through his own work, as well as through that of his followers and imitators, Rossini's style dominated Italian opera throughout the first half of the 19th century.[25]

In his compositions, Rossini plagiarized freely from himself, a common practice among deadline-pressed opera composers of the time. Few of his operas are without such admixtures, frankly introduced in the form of arias or overtures. For example, in Il Barbiere there is an aria for the Count (often omitted) "Cessa di più resistere", which Rossini used (with minor changes) in the cantata Le Nozze di Teti e di Peleo and in La Cenerentola (the cabaletta for Angelina's rondo is almost unchanged). Moreover, four of his best known overtures (La cambiale di matrimonio, Tancredi, La Cenerentola and The Barber of Seville) share operas apart from those with which they are most famously associated.

A characteristic mannerism in Rossini's orchestral scoring is a long, steady building of sound over an ostinato figure, known as a "Rossini crescendo",[26] creating "tempests in teapots by beginning in a whisper and rising to a flashing, glittering storm,"[27] which earned him the nickname of "Signor Crescendo".

A few of Rossini's operas remained popular throughout his lifetime and continuously since his death; others were resurrected from semi-obscurity in the last half of the 20th century, during the so-called "Rossini Renaissance".

Rossini himself correctly predicted that his Barber of Seville would continue to find favor with posterity, telling a friend:

One thing I believe I can assure you: that of my works, the second act of Guglielmo Tell, the third act of Otello, and all of il Barbiere di Siviglia will certainly endure. ("Ma di una cosa credo potervi assicurare: che di mio rimarrà di certo il secondo atto del Guglielmo Tell, il terzo atto dell'Otello, e tutto il barbiere di Siviglia")[28]

Works

References

  1. "Though 'Gioacchino' is the familiar spelling of the name, Rossini himself more usually adopted the spelling 'Gioachino'. This is now the accepted spelling of his first name" per Gallo, 2010, p. xv; Osborne, 1998, pp. 56–67; Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, and most Rossini scholars (including the Fondazione G. Rossini and the Center for Italian Opera Studies at the University of Chicago)
  2. Radiciotti 1927–1929, p. 8: "Giovacchino Antonio Rossini" appears on the baptismal certificate
  3. 1 2 Fisher 2005
  4. Till 1987, p. 11
  5. Montanelli, Indro (1972), L'Italia giacobina e carbonara (1789–1831), p. 612, Milan: Rizzoli. ISBN 9788817420136
  6. Gorlin 2013, p. 119.
  7. Osborne 2007, p. 5
  8. Osborne 2007, p. 7
  9. Michael Rose 2004, "Mercadante: Flute Concertos", booklet accompanying the RCA CD recording with James Galway and I Solisti Veneti under Claudio Scimone.
  10. Interview on Toll Brothers Metropolitan Opera broadcast of Guillaume Tell, rebroadcast on 2017 March 18.
  11. Faul 2009, pp. 139–41
  12. The Royal Conservatory of Brussels conserves an autograph reduction of this work for voice and pianoforte in a luxuriously bound edition with gold initials of Olympe Pélissier, Rossini's second wife (ref. Edmond Michotte fund).
  13. "Anecdotes of Rossini" by "E." in Richard Fennell: The London Magazine, Charivari, and Courrier des dames, vols. I & II, p. 370, London 1840. Simpkin, Marshall and Co.
  14. Osborne 1986, p. 148
  15. The Edmond Michotte fund of the Library of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels holds an important legacy of Rossiniana, including autograph manuscripts, books and objects.
  16. Osborne, 1986, pp. 63, 112, 268
  17. Weinstock 1968, p. ?
  18. Gazzetta Piemontese,(in Italian), 24 November 1868, p. 2: "La sua fortuna di 150,000 franchi di rendita ..."
  19. Rossini also bequeathed a life annuity and all his old clothes to his waiter Antonio Scanavini
  20. Cf. Rossini's will in CRT Pesaro Urbino (in Italian)
  21. (in Italian) Fondazione Rossini – Storia
  22. Holoman 2004
  23. Gazzetta Piemontese, (in Italian), 24 November 1868, p. 3. "Io voglio che dopo la mia morte e quella di mia moglie, siano in perpetuo fondati in Parigi ed exclusivamente per i Francesi due premii di tre mila franchi ciascuno per essere annualmente distribuiti: uno all'autore d'una composizione musicale religiosa o lirica, che dovra' specialmente appogiarsi alla melodia, oggi si trascurata; l'altro all'autore delle parole in prosa od in verse, sulle quali dovra' adattarsi la musica ed essere perfettamente appropriate, osservando le leggi della morale di cui i moderni scrittori piu non tengono verun conto."
  24. "Art and Architecture" on artandarchitecture.org.uk, published by The Courtauld Institute, London. Retrieved 1 December 2013
  25. 1 2 Taruskin 2010, p. ?
  26. Roberts 2015, pp. 57–58
  27. Faddis 2003, Program notes for a performance of the overture to La scala di seta by the Cape Anne Symphony, 2007; See also "Rossini Overtures" Liner notes for the Chandos recording (Chan 9753)
  28. Checchi 1887, p. ?

Bibliography

General

  • Checchi, Eugenio (1887). Verdi, il genio et le opere. Florence: G. Barbera. 
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. Material now in the public domain is incorporated into this article.
  • Faul, Michel (2009), Les aventures militaires, littéraires et autres d'Étienne de Jouy, Editions Seguier, France, March 2009, ISBN 978-2-84049-556-7
  • Fisher, Burton D. (2005), The Barber of Seville (Opera Classics Library Series). Grand Rapids: Opera Journeys. ISBN 1-930841-96-5 ISBN 1-930841-96-5
  • Gorlin, Sophia (2013). Music Theory for Young Musicians in the Style of Russian School of Piano Playing – Book 5. CreateSpace Independent Publishers. ISBN 978-1483945071. 
  • Harewood, Earl of, ed. (1987). Kobbé's Complete Opera Book (10th ed.). London: Bodley Head. ISBN 0370310179. 
  • Holoman, D. Kern (2004), The Societ́e ́des concerts du conservatoire, 1828–1967. University of California Press ISBN 0-520-23664-5 ISBN 9780520236646
  • Sadie, Stanley, ed. (2004). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195221862. 
  • Steen, Michael (2004), The Lives and Times of the Great Composers NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 1-84046-679-0 ISBN 1-84046-679-0
  • Taruskin, Richard (2010). Music from the Earliest Notations to the Sixteenth Century (Oxford History of Music series) (Revised ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-538481-9. 

Rossini

  • Gallo, Denise (2010) [2002]. Gioachino Rossini: A Research and Information Guide (2 ed.). Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 9781135847012. Retrieved 15 March 2015. 
  • Gossett, Philip 2009, "Rossini, Gioachino" in Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online.
  • Osborne, Richard (1986), Rossini (Master Musicians series). London: Dent. ISBN 0-460-03179-1 Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0-333-73432-7 ISBN 1-56159-228-5
  • Osborne, Richard (1986), "Rossini" in The Musical Times, Vol. 127, No. 1726 (December 1986), 691 (Musical Times Publications Ltd.) Access online
  • Osborne, Richard (2007), Rossini: His Life and Works. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007 ISBN 978-1-55553-088-4
  • Radiciotti, Giuseppe (1927–1929), Gioacchino Rossini: vita documentata, opere ed influenza su l'arte, Tivoli, Majella. (in Italian)
  • Roberts, Warren (2015). Rossini and Post-Napoleonic Europe. University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-530-4. 
  • Senici, Emanuele, ed. (2004). The Cambridge Companion to Rossini. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-00195-3. 
  • Servadio, Gaia (2003), Rossini. London: Constable; New York: Carroll and Graff. ISBN 0-7867-1195-7
  • Till, Nicholas (1987). Rossini (First published by Midas Books, London 1983 ed.). London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-7119-0988-5. 
  • Toye, Francis (1987). Rossini, the man and his music (Revised edition of Rossini: A Study in Tragi-Comedy, Heinemann, London 1934. ed.). New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486253961. Retrieved 13 March 2015. 
  • Weinstock, Herbert (1968), Rossini: A Biography. New York, Knopf. ISBN 0-87910-102-4 ISBN 0-87910-102-4

Texts, books

Sheet music

Performances

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