Cecilia Seghizzi | |
Birth Date: | 1908 9, df=y |
Birth Place: | Gorizia, Austria-Hungary |
Death Place: | Gorizia, Italy |
Cecilia Seghizzi (5 September 1908 – 22 November 2019)[1] was an Italian composer, painter and teacher.[2] [3]
Cecilia Seghizzi was the daughter of composer and choirmaster (19 January 1873 – 5 January 1933),[4] one of Italy's most popular composers. After coming back to Italy after being exiled to the refugee camp of Wagna in Austria during World War I, Cecilia began studying the violin with Alfredo Lucarini and graduated with honors from the Conservatory "G. Verdi" in Milan. In her thirties she alternated between concerts and teaching in middle school and music school.[2]
She began in the meantime to devote herself to composition, completing her studies with a diploma from the conservatory "Tartini" in Trieste under the guidance of Vito Levi. In her fifties she founded and managed the complex Gorizia polyphonic, with which she won first prize at the national polyphonic competition in Brescia. The recognition from this got her a series of concerts and recordings for major venues both at home and abroad. She lived the rest of her life in Gorizia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia.
Her music catalog included more than 130 compositions, among which many are choral music. It is in choral music that she used sonorities and driving rhythms, humorous and light swings the most. In this her work is similar to that of Alfredo Casella, Paul Hindemith, and Giulio Viozzi. Her style, very conservative, is linked to neo-classicism, and has had no trace of the innovations introduced by avant-garde music since the 1930s.
On 5 September 2018, she became a supercentenarian upon celebrating her 110th birthday.[5] She died on 22 November 2019, aged 111.[6]