RectanglesMusic
MoviesTVBooksMusicPodcastsGames

Loading details…

DiscoverChatSavedSettings

Artist

Giuseppe Gazzaniga

12+ albums
italianNeapolitan schoolClassicalopera19th century

listen to works

S

Spotify

Listen on Spotify

→
♪

Apple Music

Listen on Apple Music

→
Y

YouTube Music

Listen on YouTube Music

→

about

Giuseppe Gazzaniga (October 5, 1743 - February 1, 1818) was a member of the Neapolitan school of opera composers. He composed fiftyone operas and is considered to be one of the last Italian opera buffa composers. Born in Verona, Gazzaniga was initially intended for the priesthood at the urging of his devout parents. He eventually convinced his father to allow him to pursue a career in music and began studies first in Venice and then at the Conservatorio di Sant'Onofrio a Porta Capuana in Naples. While there, he was a pupil of Niccolò Piccinni and Nicola Porpora. Gazzaniga presented his first opera, il Barone di Trocchia, at the Teatro di San Carlo in 1768. He would spend the next several decades writing mostly operas in Italy with the exception of a few trips to Dresden, Vienna, and Prague. His most successful opera was his Don Giovanni Tenorio written in 1787 to a libretto by Giovanni Bertati, possibly an ispiration for the libretto of Mozart's Don Giovanni. His last opera, Martino Carbonaro o sia Gli sposi fuggitivi, was performed at the Teatro San Moisè in Venice in 1801.[1] He also wrote a symphony and three piano concertos.[2] In 1791, he became musical director of Crema Cathedral in the Lombardy region of northern Italy, where he composed numerous sacred works including several cantatas, oratorios, and masses. He remained in that position until his death in 1818.[3] His life and works were the subject of a detailed study by the prominent 19th-century German critic Kar

top songs

1

Atto I: Sinfonia

38
2

L 'isola d 'Alcina: Atto III: Spiri il vento a noi in favore (Coro)

35
3

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena Ultima: "Qual strepito è questo..." (Lanterna, Maturina, Donna Elvira, Donna Ximena, Duca Ottavio, Pasquariello)

24
4

L 'isola d 'Alcina: Atto I: Sinfonia

12
5

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena VII: Duetto "Dell'Italia, ed Alemagna" (Donna Elvira, Pasquariello)

9
6

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena II: "Qual tradimento! Perfido!" (Commendatore, Don Giovanni, Pasquariello)

9
7

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena I: Introduzione "La gran bestia è il mio padrone!" (Pasquariello, Donna Anna, Don Giovanni)

9
8

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena IV: Aria "Vicin sperai l'istante" (Duca Ottavio)

9
9

Don Giovanni (Version without Recitatives): Scena VI: Cavatina "Povere femmine" (Donna Elvira)

7
10

Don Giovanni o sia Il Convitato di pietra: Overture (Live)

7

albums

▥

Giuseppe Gazzaniga: L'isola d'Alcina

Gazzaniga: Don Giovanni

Gazzaniga: Don Giovanni

▥

Sinfonia

▥

Gazzaniga: Don Giovanni o sia Il Convitato di pietra

▥

Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra - The Complete Sony Recordings

Gazzaniga: Stabat Mater & Gloria (Live)

Gazzaniga: Stabat Mater & Gloria (Live)

▥

Don Giovanni o sia il convitato di pietra

Don Giovanni

Don Giovanni

▥

Gazzaniga, G.: Don Giovanni Tenorio O Sia Il Convitato Di Pietra [Opera]

Gazzangia: Don Giovanni Tenorio

Gazzangia: Don Giovanni Tenorio

▥

Fra lieti piaceri (Coro)

▥

L'isola D'Alcina

similar artists

Gaspare SpontiniNiccolò PiccinniGiovanni PaciniAntonio SacchiniTommaso TraettaDomenico SarroArrigo BoitoGaetano Donizetti
View on Last.fm →