Malipiero, Gian Francesco
Malipiero, Gian Francesco
Malipiero, Gian Francesco, eminent Italian composer and teacher, uncle of Riccardo Malipiero; b. Venice, March 18, 1882; d. Treviso, near Venice, Aug. 1, 1973. His grandfather, Francesco Malipiero, was a composer, and his father, Luigi Malipiero, was a pianist and conductor. In 1898 Malipiero enrolled at the Vienna Cons, as a violin student; in 1899 he returned to Venice, where he studied at the Liceo Musicale Benedetto Marcello with Marco Bossi, whom he followed to Bologna in 1904, and took a diploma in composition at the Liceo Musicale G.B. Martini that same year; subsequently worked as amanuensis to Smareglia, gaining valuable experience in orchestration. He studied briefly with Bruch in Berlin (1908); later went to Paris (1913), where he absorbed the techniques of musical Impressionism, cultivating parallel chord formations and amplified tonal harmonies with characteristic added sixths, ninths, and elevenths. However, his own style of composition was determined by the polyphonic practices of the Italian Baroque. Malipiero was prof. of composition at the Parma Cons. (1921–23); afterwards lived mostly in Asolo, near Venice. He was made prof. of composition at the Liceo Musicale Benedetto Marcello in Venice (1932), continuing there when it became the Cons. (1940); was its director (1939–52). He ed. a complete edition of the works of Monteverdi (16 vols., Bologna and Vienna, 1926–42) and many works by Vivaldi, as well as works by other Italian composers. He was made a member of the National Inst. of Arts and Letters in N.Y. in 1949, the Royal Flemish Academy in Brussels in 1952, the Institut de France in 1954, and the Akademie der Künste in West Berlin in 1967.
Works
dramatic: Opera: Canossa (1911–12; Rome, Jan. 24, 1914); Sogno d’un tramonto d’autunno (1913–14; concert perf., RAI, Milan, Oct. 4, 1963); L’Orfeide, in 3 parts: La morte della maschere, 7 canzoni, and Orfeo (1918–22; Ist complete perf., Düsseldorf, Nov. 5,1925; 7 canzoni[Paris, July 10,1920] is often perf. separately); 3 commedie goldoniane: La bottega da caffè, Sior Todaro Brontolon, and Le baruffe chiozzotte (1920–22; Istcomplete perf., Darmstadt, March 24,1926); Filomela e l’Infatuato (1924–25; Prague, March 31, 1928); II mistero di Venezia, in 3 parts: Le aquile di aquileia, II finto Arlecchino, and I corvi di San Marco (1925–28; Ist complete perf., Coburg, Dee. 15, 1932); Merlino, Maestro d’organi (1926–27; Rome Radio, Aug. 1, 1934); Torneo notturno (1929; Munich, May 15, 1931); II festino (1930; Turin Radio, Nov. 6,1937); La favola del figlio cambiato (1932–33; in German, Braunschweig, Jan. 13,1934); Giulio Cesare (1934–35; Genoa, Feb. 8, 1936); Antonio e Cleopatra (1936–37; Florence, May 4, 1938); Ecuba (1938; Rome, Jan. 11, 1941); La vita è sogno (1940–41; Breslau, June 30, 1943); I capricci di Callot (1941–42; Rome, Oct. 24,1942); L’allegra brigata (1943; Milan, May 4,1950); Mondi celesti e infernali (1948–49; RAI, Turin, Jan. 12, 1950; 1ststage perf., Venice, Feb. 2, 1961); II Figliuol prodigo (1952; RAI, Jan. 25, 1953; Ist stage perf., Florence May Festival, May 14, 1957); Donna Urraca (1953–54; Bergamo, Oct. 2,1954); II capitanSpavento (1954–55; Naples, March 16, 1963); Venere prigioniera (1955; Florence May Festival, May 14, 1957); II marescalco (1960–68; Treviso, Oct. 22, 1969); Rappresentazione e festa del Carnasciale e della Quaresima (1961; concert perf., Venice, April 20, 1962; Ist stage perf., Venice, Jan. 20, 1970); Don Giovanni (1962; Naples, Oct. 22, 1963); Le metamorfosi di Bonaventura (1963–65; Venice, Sept. 4, 1966); Don Tartufo bacchettone (1966; Venice, Jan. 20, 1970); Gli Eroi di Bonaventura (1968; Milan, Feb. 7, 1969); L’Iscariota (1970; Siena, Aug. 28, 1971); Uno dei dieci (1970; Siena, Aug. 28, 1971). ballet:Pantea (1917–19; Venice, Sept. 6,1932); La mascherata delle principesse prigioniere (1919; Brussels, Oct. 19, 1924); Stradivario (1947–48; Florence, June 20, 1949); II mondo novo (1950–51; Rome, Dec. 16, 1951; rev. as La lanterna magica, 1955). orch.: dialoghi: No. 1, con M. de Falla, for Orch., No. 2 for 2 Pianos, No. 3, con Jacopone da Todi, for Voice and 2 Pianos, No. 4 for Wind Quintet, No. 5 for Viola and Orch., No. 6 for Harpsichord and Orch., No. 7 for 2 Pianos and Orch., and No. 8, La morte di Socrate, for Baritone and Small Orch. (all 1956–57). other:Sinfonia degli eroi (1905); Sinfonia del mare (1906); Sinfonie del silenzio e della morte (1909–11); Impressioni dal vero in 3 parts (1910–11; 1st part, Milan, May 15, 1913; 2nd part, Rome, March 11,1917; 3rd part, Amsterdam, Oct. 25, 1923); Armenia, on Armenian folk songs (1917); Ditirambo tragico (1917; London, Oct. 11,1919); Pause del silenzio in 2 parts (1st part, 1917; Rome, Jan. 27,1918; 2nd part, 1925–26; Philadelphia, April 1,1927); Per una favola cavalieresca (1920; Rome, Feb. 13,1921); Oriente immaginario for Chamber Orch. (Paris, Dec. 23, 1920); Variazioni senza tema for Piano and Orch. (1923; Prague, May 19, 1925); L’esilo dell’eroe, symphonic suite (1930); Concerti per orchestra (1931; Philadelphia, Jan. 29, 1932); Inni (1932; Rome, April 6, 1933; rev. 1934); 2 violin concertos: No. 1 (1932; Amsterdam, March 5, 1933) and No. 2 (1963; Venice, Sept. 14, 1965); 7 invenzioni (1932; Rome, Dec. 24, 1933); 4 invenzioni (1932; Dresden, Nov. 11, 1936); 11 numbered syms.: No. 1 (1933–34; Florence, April 2, 1934), No. 2, Elegiaca (1936; Seattle, Jan. 25, 1937), No. 3, Delle campane (1944–45; Florence, Nov. 4, 1945), No. 4, In Memoriam (1946; Boston, Feb. 27, 1948; in memory of Natalie Koussevitzky), No. 5, Concertante, in eco, for
2 Pianos and Orch. (London, Nov. 3,1947), No. 6, Degli archi, for Strings (1947; Basel, Feb. 11, 1949), No. 7, Delle canzoni (1948; Milan, Nov. 3, 1949), No. 8, Symphonia brevis (1964), No. 9, Dell’ahimè (Warsaw, Sept. 21, 1966), No. 10, Atropo (1967), and No. 11, Delle cornamuse (1969); 6 piano concertos: No. 1 (1934; Rome, April 3,1935), No. 2 (1937; Duisburg, March 6,1939), No.
3 (1948; Louisville, March 8,1949), No. 4 (1950; RAI, Turin, Jan. 28, 1951), No. 5 (1957–58), and No. 6, Delle macchine (1964; Rome, Feb. 5, 1966); Cello Concerto (1937; Belgrade, Jan. 31, 1939); Concerto a 3 for Violin, Cello, Piano, and Orch. (1938; Florence, April 9,1939); Sinfonia in un tempo (1950; Rome, March
21, 1951); Sinfonia dello zodiaco (1951; Lausanne, Jan. 23, 1952); Passacaglie (1952); Fantasie di ogni giorni (1953; Louisville, Nov. 17, 1954); Elegy-Capriccio (1953); 4 Fantasie concertanti (ali 1954): No. 1 for Strings, No. 2 for Violin and Orch., No. 3 for Cello and Orch., and No. 4 for Piano and Orch.; Notturno di canti e balli (1956–57); Concerto for 2 Pianos and Orch. (Besançon, Sept. Il, 1957); Serenissima for Saxophone and Orch. (1961); Sinfonia per Antigenida (1962); Flute Concerto (1967–68); San Zanipolo (1969); Undicesima Sinfonia, delle cornamuse (1969); Omaggio a Belmonte (1971). chamber: 8 string quartets: No. 1, Rispetti e Strom-botti (1920), No. 2, Stornelli e Ballate (1923), No. 3, Cantari alla madrigalesca (1930; also for String Orch.), No. 4 (1934), No. 5, Dei capricci (1940), No. 6, L’arca di Noè (1947), No. 7 (1949–50), and No. 8, Per Elisabetta (1964); Ricercari for 11 Instruments (Washington, D.C., Oct. 7, 1926); Ritrovari for 11 Instruments (1926; Gardone, Oct. 26, 1929); Sonata a 3 for Piano Trio (1926–27); Epodi e giambi for Violin, Viola, Oboe, and Bassoon (1932); Sonata a 5 for Flute, Violin, Viola, Cello, and Harp (1934); Cello Sonatina (1942); Sonata a 4 for 4 Winds (1954); Serenata mattutini for 10 Instruments (1959); Serenata for Bassoon and 10 Instruments (1961); Macchine for 14 Instruments (1963); Endecatode, chamber sym. for 14 Instruments and Percussion (1966; Hanover, N.H., July 2,1967). p i a n o :6 morceaux (1905); Bizzarrie luminose dell’ alba, del meriggio e della notte (1908); Poemetti lunari (1909–10); Preludi autunnali (1914); Poemi asolani (1916); Barlumi (1917); Risonanze (1918); Maschere che passano (1918); 3 omaggi (1920); Omaggio a Claude Debussy (1920); Cavalcate (1921); La siesta (1921); II tarlo (1921–22); Pasqua di Resurrezione (1924); Preludi a una fuga (1926); Epitaffio (1931); Omaggio a Bach (1932); Preludi, ritmi e canti gregoriani (1937); Preludio e fuga (1940); Hortus conclusus (1946); 5 studi per domani (1959); Variazione sulla “Pantomima” dell’Amor brujo di Manuel de Falla (1960); Bianchi e neri (1964).vocal:San Francesco d’Assisi, mystery for Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (1920–21; N.Y., March 29, 1922); La Principessa Ulalia, cantata (1924; N.Y., Feb. 19, 1927); La cena for Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (1927; Rochester, N.Y., April 25, 1929); II commiato for Baritone and Orch. (1934); La Passione for Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (Rome, Dec. 15,1935); De Profundis for Voice, Viola, Bass Drum, and Piano (1937); Missa pro mortuis for Baritone, Chorus, and Orch. (Rome, Dec. 18,1938); 4 vecchie canzoni for Voice and 7 Instruments (1940; Washington, D.C., April 12, 1941); Santa Eufrosina, mystery for Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (Rome, Dec. 6, 1942); Universa Universis for Men’s Chorus and Chamber Orch. (1942; Liviano, April 11, 1943); Vergilii Aeneis, heroic sym. for 7 Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (1943–44; Turin, June 21, 1946; scenic version, Venice, Jan. 6, 1958); Le 7 allegrezze d’amore for Voice and 14 Instruments (1944–45; Milan, Dec. 4, 1945); La Terra for Chorus and Orch. (1946; Cambridge, Mass., May 2, 1947, with Organ); I 7 peccati mortali for Chorus and Orch. (1946; Monteceneri, Nov. 20,1949); Mondi celesti for Voice and 10 Instruments (1948; Capri, Feb. 3, 1949); La festa de la Sensa for Baritone, Chorus, and Orch. (1949–50; Brussels Radio, July 2, 1954); 5 favole for Voice and Small Orch. (Washington, D.C., Oct. 30,1950); Passer mortuus est for Chorus (Pittsburgh, Nov. 24, 1952); Magister Josephus for 4 Voices and Small Orch. (1957); Preludio e Morte di Macbeth for Baritone and Orch. (1958); L’asino d’oro for Baritone and Orch., after Apuleius (1959); Concerto di concerti ovvero Dell’uom malcontento for Baritone, Concertante Violin, and Orch. (1960); Abracadabra for Baritone and Orch. (1962); Ave Phoebe, dum queror for Chorus and 20 Instruments (1964); L’Aredodese for Reciter, Chorus, and Orch. (1967).
Writings
L’orchestra (Bologna, 1920; Eng. tr., 1920); Teatro (Bologna, 1920; 2nd ed., 1927); Oreste e Pilade, ovvero “Le sorprese dell’amicizia” (Parma, 1922); I profeti di Babilonia (Milan, 1924); Claudio Monteverdi (Milan, 1929); Strawinsky (Venice, 1945; new ed., 1982); La pietra del bando (Venice, 1945; new ed., 1990); Anton Francesco Doni, musico (Venice, 1946); Cossi va lo mondo (Milan, 1946); L’armonioso labirinto (da Tarlino a Padre Martini, 1558–1774) (Milan, 1946); Antonio Vivaldi, il prete rosso (Milan, 1958); II filo d’Arianna (saggi e fantasie) (Turin, 1966); Ti co mi e mi co ti (soliloqui di un veneziano) (Milan, 1966); Così parlò Claudio Monteverdi (Milan, 1967); Di palo infrasca (Milan, 1967); Da Venezia lontan (Milan, 1968); Maschere della commedia dell’arte (Bologna, 1969).
Bibliography
F. Aliano, A. Casella, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco et al, M. e le sue “Sette canzoni” (Rome, 1929); F. Ballo, “I ’Capricci’ di Callot” di G.F M.(Milan, 1942); M. Bontempelli and R. Cumar, G.F. M.(Milan, 1942); G. Scarpa, ed., L’opera di G.F. M.(Treviso, 1952); M. Labroca, M., musicista veneziano (Venice, 1957; 2nd ed., 1967); A. Gianuario, G.F. M. e l’arte monteverdiana (Florence, 1973); M. Messinis, ed., Omaggio a M.(Florence, 1977); J. Waterhouse, La musica G.F. M.(Turin, 1990); C. Palandri, ed., G.F. M., il carteggio con Guido M. Gatti, 1914–1972 (Florence, 1997).
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire
Malipiero, Gian Francesco
Also songs and pf. pieces.
Gian Francesco Malipiero
Gian Francesco Malipiero
Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882-1973) was one of Italy's most respected and prolific composers. Aside from his own symphonic, operatic, vocal and chamber music compositions, he was a musicologist and music educator who edited Monteverdi and Vivaldi—for which he was well-known. He was said to write brilliantly for the orchestra, but on the whole his works found little popular acceptance. Stylistically, he fell between Puccini and Respighi.
Gian Francesco Malipiero was born Aug. 3, 1882, in Venice, and spent much of his life there. The grandson and son of musicians, he studied the violin as a boy in Venice and in Vienna. Upon returning to his native city, he entered the Liceo Musicale Benedetto Marcello as a composition student and transferred to the conservatory in Bologna.
Stravinsky Was an Early Influence
In 1913 Malipiero went to Paris, where he met Maurice Ravel and Igor Stravinsky and heard the first performance of the latter's Rite of Spring. This was a turning point in Malipiero's life. He repudiated all of his earlier compositions and set about achieving an individual style of music that would be freed from the clichés of the overwhelmingly popular 19th-century opera—a problem faced by several Italian composers of his generation.
He Edited Monteverdi, Vivaldi
Malipiero found elements of his mature style in the works of 17th-and 18th-century Italian composers, such as Claudio Monteverdi, Francesco Cavalli, Giuseppe Tartini, and Antonio Vivaldi. Almost none of the music of these masters was available; when Malipiero found the manuscripts and original editions in the library of the Liceo Musicale in Venice, he started the lifelong project of transcribing and publishing them.
One of the results of these efforts was Vivaldiana, for which Malipiero was well-known. With his original Inventions (two sets, the latter titled The Feast of the Indolents), he combined a wide range of orchestral and operatic compositions. A portion of the work was used in the Walter Ruttmann film Steel.
Taught and Popularized Italian Music
Malipiero was a composer but he was also an academic. In 1921 he became a professor at the Parma Conservatory, and in 1924 he cofounded (with Alfredo Casella) an association for the popularization of modern Italian music. Malipiero's Antonio e Cleopatra was first performed on May 4, 1938, in Florence. For this opera, he wrote his own libretto. From 1939 to 1952 Malipiero would direct music institutes at Padua and Venice.
Music Didn't Survive Initial Performances
Malipiero wrote more than 25 operas, 4 ballets, 15 symphonic poems, 9 symphonies, 4 piano concertos, a violin concerto, large works for choir and orchestra, chamber music, and piano music. Most of this music was performed at the Festival of Contemporary Music held biannually in Venice, but little of it survived the premieres. This was probably because Malipiero's style was unpopular with the general public, the critics, and his fellow professional musicians.
Malipiero's style was highly intellectual and based upon his desire to return to the foundations of Italian music. He carefully avoided spectacular or exciting effects. For his librettos he frequently chose fantastic or metaphysical tales whose elusive meaning left the general audience more bewildered than satisfied.
Gian Francesco Malipiero died Jan. 8, 1973, in Venice.
Further Reading
Malipiero's Antonio e Cleopatra is discussed in Opera News (June 1988). His work is also discussed in an article titled "La musica di Gian Francesco Malipiero" Music and Letters (Feb. 1992); and in Cynthia Barr, "The Musicological Legacy of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge" Journal of Musicology (Spring 1993).
For biographical information on Malipiero see G. Francesco Malipiero (Chester, 1922); Nicolas Slonimsky, Music since 1900 (W.W. Norton and Company, Inc., 1937, 3d rev. ed. 1949); Gerald Abraham, A Hundred Years of Music (Duckworth, 1938, 2d ed. 1949); David Ewen, ed., The Book of Modern Composers (Knopf, 1942, 3d ed. 1961); and Malipiero, Scrittura e Critica (Firenze, 1984).
Correspondence between Malipiero and composer/author Everett Burton Helm, and between Malipiero and stage director Max Heinrich Fisher, may be found in the Manuscripts Department at Indiana University's Lilly Library. Within the 234 items are articles Helm wrote about Malipiero, including an interview Helm conducted with him. The file also contains the manuscripts of Malipiero's "Il commitato per orchestra e una voce," dated July 23, 1934, as well as newspaper clippings and photographs of Malipiero. □