Enrico Golisciani

Enrico Golisciani (25 December 1848 – 6 February 1919) was an Italian author, born in Naples. He is best known for his opera librettos, but also published a slim volume of verses for music, entitled Pagine d'Album (Milano, Ricordi, 1885); many more of his poems intended to be set to music were published in the Gazzetta Musicale di Milano.

Ed. Ricordi 1883, musica di Francesco Paolo Frontini

Selected librettos

  • Carlo di Borgogna (Pietro Musone – Naples, Teatro Mercadante, 22 March 1876)
  • Lida Wilson (Ferdinando Bonamici – Pisa, Teatro Nuovo, 31 January 1878)
  • Il Conte di San Ronano (Nicola De Giosa – Naples, Teatro Bellini, 12 May 1878)
  • Griselda (Giulio Cottrau – Turin, Teatro Alfieri, 25 September 1878)
  • Il ritratto di Perla (Cesare Rossi – Naples, Circolo Unione, 7 January 1879)
  • Sogno d'amore (Cesare Bernardo Bellini – Naples, Casino dell'Unione, 12 January 1880)
  • I cavalieri di Malta (Antonio Nani) – Valletta, Royal Opera House 16 January 1880)
  • Nella (Francesco Paolo Frontini – Catania, Teatro Comunale, 31 March 1881)
  • Rabagas (Nicola De Giosa – Rome, Teatro Argentina, 23 March 1882)
  • Cordelia dei Neri (Ferdinando Aldieri – La Valletta, Teatro Reale, 9 May 1884)
  • Marion Delorme (Amilcare Ponchielli – Milan, Teatro alla Scala, 17 March 1885)
  • Cimbelino (Niccolò van Westerhout – Naples, private performance, December 1887)
  • Marina (Umberto Giordano – composed in 1888, but not performed)
  • Gina (Francesco Cilea – Naples, Collegio di musica, 9 February 1889)
  • Bianca di Nevers (Adolfo Baci – Rovigo, Teatro Sociale, 1 November 1889)
  • A Santa Lucia (Pierantonio Tasca – Berlin, Kroll Opera House 1892)
  • Il segreto di Susanna (Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari – Munich, Hoftheater, 4 December 1909)
  • L'amore medico (Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari – Dresden, Hoftheater, 4 December 1913)

Translations into Italian

  • Il pipistrello (Nicola De Giosa – Italian premiere at Naples, Società Filarmonica, 28 January 1875)

Poems set to music

Romances:

References

This article was originally translated from this version of its counterpart in the Italian Wikipedia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.