Ermanno Picchi Explained

Ermanno Picchi
Birth Date:7 June 1811
Birth Place:Impruneta, Italy
Death Place:Florence, Italy
Nationality:Italian
Occupation:
  • composer
  • pedagogue
  • music critic

Ermanno Picchi (7 June 1811 – 18 April 1856) was an Italian composer, pedagogue and music critic who played an active role in the musical life of Florence from 1836 until his early death in 1856.

Life and career

Picchi was born in Impruneta in the Province of Florence and studied composition under Ignazio Colson. His first opera, Marco Visconti premiered at the Teatro del Cocomero in Florence in 1838. His second opera Il tre novembre premiered in 1844 at the Teatro della Pergola. Over the course of his career he composed four operas, an oratorio, numerous pieces of sacred music, music for military bands, and two piano fantasias (both published by Ricordi) on themes from Donizetti's La fille du régiment and Pacini's Saffo.[1] [2] He also composed Concerto for alto sax and band, on the occasion of the presentation of the sax in Italy.

He was appointed secretary of the Florence Conservatory (at the time an annex of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze) in 1850 and in 1852 succeeded Giovanni Pacini as its director. Picchi became the founding editor of the weekly journal Gazzetta musicale di Firenze in 1853, providing critical guidance in its first two years of publication. Each issue came in two parts. The first had essays on music theory and criticism, while the second focused on reviews of noteworthy performances in Italy and the rest of Europe as well as literary and biographical articles. He also translated the libretto of Meyerbeer's L'étoile du nord for its Italian premiere in 1856 as La stella del nord.[3]

Picchi died in Florence at the age of 44 from what was described at the time as "miliary fever". His daughter Elisa married the Florentine composer Giuseppe Ceccherini.[4]

Operas and oratorios

External links

Notes and References

  1. Champlin, John Denison and Apthorp, William Foster (1888). "Picchi, Ermanno". Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians , Vol. 3, p. 122. Charles Scribner's Sons
  2. [François-Joseph Fétis|Fétis, François-Joseph]
  3. Capra, Marco (1989). Introduction: Gazzetta musicale di Firenze. Répertoire international de la presse musicale. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  4. Menichini, Paola Ircani (March–April 2009). "Il musicista Giuseppe Ceccherini nel ricordo della morte (1899)", p. 6. Bollettino della Basilica della Santissima Annunziata. Retrieved 2 October 2016 .
  5. Garlington, Aubrey S. (1991). Confraternity and Carnevale at San Giovanni Evangelista, Florence, 1820-1924, p. 79. Pendragon Press.
  6. De Angelis, Marcello (1978). La musica del Granduca. Vita musicale e correnti critiche a Firenze 1800-1855, p. 119. Vallecchi
  7. Ambìveri, Corrado (1998). Operisti minori: dell'ottocento Italiano, pp. 68; 119. Gremese Editore.