Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi
(Born; Roncole, 9/10 Oct 1813; Died; Milan, 27
Jan 1901). Italian composer. He was born into a family of small landowners and taverners.
When he was seven he was helping the local church organist; at 12 he was studying with the
organist at the main church in nearby Busseto, whose assistant he became in 1829. He
already had several compositions to his credit. In 1832 he was sent to Milan, but was
refused a place at the conservatory and studied with Vincenzo Lavigna, composer and former
La Scala musician. He might have taken a post as organist at Monza in 1835, but returned
to Busseto where he was passed over as maestro di cappella but became town music
master in 1836 and married Margherita Barezzi, his patron's daughter (their two children
died in infancy).
Verdi had begun an opera, and tried to arrange
a performance in Parma or Milan; he was unsuccessful but had some songs published and
decided to settle in Milan in 1839 where his Oberto was accepted at La Scala and
further operas commissioned. It was well received but his next, Un giorno di regno,
failed totally; and his wife died during its composition. Verdi nearly gave up, but was
fired by the libretto of Nabucco and in 1842 saw its successful production, which
carried his reputation across Italy, Europe and the New World over the next five years. It
was followed by another opera also with marked political overtones, I lombardi alla
prima crociata, again well received. Verdi's gift for stirring melody and tragic and
heroic situations struck a chord in an Italy struggling for freedom and unity, causes with
which he was sympathetic; but much opera of this period has political themes and the
involvement of Verdi's operas in politics is easily exaggerated.
The period Verdi later called his 'years in
the galleys' now began, with a long and demanding series of operas to compose and
(usually) direct, in the main Italian centres and abroad: they include Ernani, Macbeth,
Luisa Miller and eight others in 1844-50, in Paris and London as well as Rome, Milan,
Naples, Venice, Florence and Trieste (with a pause in 1846 when his health gave way).
Features of these works include strong, sombre stories, a vigorous, almost crude
orchestral style that gradually grew fuller and richer forceful vocal writing including
broad lines in 9/8 and 12/8 metre and above all a seriousness in his determination to
convey the full force of the drama. His models included late Rossini, Mercadante and
Donizetti. He took great care over the choice of topics and about the detailed planning of
his librettos. He established his basic vocal types early, in Ernani : the
vigorous, determined baritone, the ardent, courageous but sometimes despairing tenor, the
severe bass; among the women there is more variation.
The 'galley years' have their climax in the
three great, popular operas of 1851-3. First among them is Rigoletto, produced in
Venice (after trouble with the censors, a recurring theme in Verdi) and a huge success, as
its richly varied and unprecedentedly dramatic music amply justifies. No less successful,
in Rome, was the more direct Il trovatore, at the beginning of 1853; but six weeks
later La traviata, the most personal and intimate of Verdi's operas, was a failure
in Venice - though with some revisions it was favourably received the following year at a
different Venetian theatre. With the dark drama of the one, the heroics of the second and
the grace and pathos of the third, Verdi had shown how extraordinarily wide was his
expressive range.
Later in 1853 he went - with Giuseppina
Strepponi, the soprano with whom he had been living for several years, and whom he was to
marry in 1859 - to Paris, to prepare Les vêpres siciliennes for the Opéra, where
it was given in 1855 with modest success. Verdi remained there for a time to defend his
rights in face of the piracies of the Théâtre des Italiens and to deal with translations
of some of his operas. The next new one was the sombre Simon Boccanegra, a drama
about love and politics in medieval Genoa, given in Venice. Plans for Un ballo in
maschera, about the assassination of a Swedish king, in Naples were called off because
of the censors and it was given instead in Rome (1859). Verdi was involved himself in
political activity at this time, as representative of Busseto (where he lived) in the
provincial parliament; later, pressed by Cavour, he was elected to the national
parliament, and ultimately he was a senator. In 1862 La forza del destino had its
première at St Petersburg. A revised Macbeth was given in Paris in 1865, but his
most important work for the French capital was Don Carlos, a grand opera after
Schiller in which personal dramas of love, comradeship and liberty are set against the
persecutions of the Inquisition and the Spanish monarchy. It was given in 1867 and several
times revised for later, Italian revivals.
Verdi returned to Italy, to live at Genoa. In
1870 he began work on Aida, given at Cairo Opera House at the end of 1871 to mark
the opening of the Suez Canal (Verdi was not present): again in the grand opera tradition,
and more taut in structure than Don Carlos. Verdi was ready to give up opera; his
works of 1873 are a string quartet and the vivid, appealing Requiem in honour of the poet
Manzoni, given in 1874-5, in Milan (S Marco and La Scala, aptly), Paris, London and
Vienna. In 1879 the composer-poet Boito and the publisher Ricordi prevailed upon Verdi to
write another opera, Otello; Verdi, working slowly and much occupied with revisions
of earlier operas, completed it only in 1886. This, his most powerful tragic work, a study
in evil and jealousy, had its première in Milan in 1887; it is notable for the increasing
richness of allusive detail in the orchestral writing and the approach to a more
continuous musical texture, though Verdi, with his faith in the expressive force of the
human voice, did not abandon the 'set piece' (aria, duet etc) even if he integrated it
more fully into its context - above all in his next opera. This was another Shakespeare
work, Falstaff, on which he embarked two years later - his first comedy since the
beginning of his career, with a score whose wit and lightness betray the hand of a serene
master, was given in 1893. That was his last opera; still to come was a set of Quattro
pezzi sacri (although Verdi was a non-believer). He spent his last years in Milan,
rich, authoritarian but charitable, much visited, revered and honoured. He died at the
beginning of 1901; 28,000 people lined the streets for his funeral.
Operas: Oberto, Conte di San
Bonifacio (1839); On giorno di regno (1840); Nabucco (1842); I lombardi alla prima
crociata (1843); Ernani (1844); I due Foscari (1844); Giovanna d'Arco (1845); Alzira
(1845); Attila (1846); Macbeth (1847); I masnadieri (1847); Jérusalem (1847); Il corsaro
(1848); La battaglia di Legnano (1849); Luisa Miller (1849); Stiffelio (1850); Rigoletto
(1851); Il trovatore (1853); La traviata (1853); Les vêpres siciliennes (1855); Simon
Boccanegra (1857); Aroldo (1857); un ballo maschera (1859); La forza del destino (1862);
Don Carlos (1867); Aida (1871); Otello (1887); Falstaff (1893)
Vocal music: Requiem, (1874);
Quatro pezzi sacri (1898); 7 other choral works; songs, trios
Instrumental music: String Qt
e (1873); pf pieces
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