- Luigi Arditi
Luigi Arditi (
16 July 1822 -1 May 1903 ), was an Italianviolinist ,composer and conductor.Arditi was born in Crescentino,
Piemonte (Italy). He began his musical career as a violinist, and studied music at the Conservatory ofMilan . He made his debut in 1843 as a director atVercelli , and it was there that he was made an honorary member of the Philharmonic Academy. Arditi conductedopera throughout Italy and in 1846 found himself gracing platforms as far afield asHavana inCuba . This was where he first metBottesini ). He visited America, where he remained for a while, conducting operas in New York, Philadelphia and other cities until 1856. Then, following a visit toConstantinople , he decided to settle inLondon , but made several trips again to America with the Royal Italian Opera Company. He also conducted inGermany , and in other major European cities such asSt. Petersburg ,Vienna andMadrid . After 1885, he was in England, conducting at Covent Garden and in various prestigious theatres andpromenade concert s in London's pleasure parks. He died atHove , nearBrighton (England ). Arditi's best-known operas are: "I Briganti", "II Corsaro", and "La Spia", (The Spy). In addition he wrote numeroussongs and vocalwaltzes , the most popular of which are "Il Bacio" (The Kiss), "Le TortorelIe", "Se Seran Rose", and the "Parla Waltz".His "Inno Turco" (1856) for Sultan
Abdülmecid set to a text in Ottoman was later sung in London during the state visit of SultanAbdülaziz to London at Crystal Palace by a British choir of 1600 in July 1867. The world premiere recording of "Inno Turco", by Turkish music historian DrEmre Araci with the Prague Symphony Orchestra and Philharmonic Choir, was released in 2005 by theBrilliant Classics label.External links
*IMSLP|id=Arditi%2C_Luigi
* [http://arditi.homestead.com/index.html Index ] at arditi.homestead.com
* [http://music.brilliantclassics.com/epages/joan.storefront/47726e8100071fbd271dd5d385f406cb/Cartridge/sl126403e5/ProductInfo/93613 World premiere recording of "Inno Turco" (1856) is featured on Emre Araci's "Euro-Ottomania" album released by Brilliant Classics]References
*1911
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