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Gian-Francesco Malipiero
Born: March 18, 1882; Venice, Italy   Died: August 1, 1973; Treviso, Italy  
Extremely prolific, somewhat uneven, and tremendously influential, Gian Francesco Malipiero came to be regarded as the most original musical mind of his day and place. His music fused modern techniques with the stylistic qualities of early Italian music.

In his youth Malipiero briefly enrolled as a violin student at the Vienna Conservatory, and also studied in Venice and Bologna (where he obtained a diploma in composition from the G.B.
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Featured Gian-Francesco Malipiero CDs & DVDs:
Malipiero: Symphonies Nos. 5, 6, 7 & 11 / Antonio De Almeida, Moscow So
Release Date: 12/13/1994   Label: Marco Polo   Catalog: 223696   Number of Discs: 1
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Works
Bizzarrie luminose dell'alba, del meriggio, della notte (1)
Canto nell'infinito (1)
Canzonette veneziane (7) (2)
Concerto for Piano no 1 (1)
Concerto for Piano no 2 (1)
Concerto for Piano no 3 (2)
Concerto for Piano no 4 (1)
Concerto for Piano no 5 (1)
Concerto for Piano no 6 "delle macchine" (1)
Concerto for Violin no 1 (1)
Dialogo no 1 "con Manuel de Falla, in memoria" (1)
Dialogo no 2 for 2 Pianos (1)
Dialogo no 3 for Voice and 2 Pianos "con Jacopone da Todi" (1)
Dialogo no 5 "Quasi concerto" (1)
Dialogo no 7 for 2 Pianos and Orchestra (2)
Endecatode (1)
Epodi e giambi (1)
Fantasie di ogni giorno (1)
Favole (1)
Gabrieliana (3)
Hommage à Claude Debussy (2)
Hortus conclusus (1)
I Sonetti delle Fate, for voice & piano (1)
Il finto arlecchino: Symphonic Fragments (2)
Il tarlo (1)
Impressioni dal vero I (1)
Impressioni dal vero II (1)
Impressioni dal vero III (1)
Improvisations (3) for Pianola (2)
Invenzioni (4) "La festa degli indolenti" (2)
Invenzioni (7) (2)
Julius Cäsar: Caro! Bella! Più amabile belta (1)
Keepsake (1)
La Cimarosiana (2)
Lento (1)
Macchine (1)
Madrigali (1)
Mondi celesti (1)
Notturno di canti e balli (1)
Omaggi (3), for piano: [Excerpt] (1)
Pause del silenzio I (1)
Pause del silenzio II (1)
Quartet for Strings no 1 "Rispetti e strambotti" (2)
Quartet for Strings no 2 "Stornelli e ballate" (1)
Quartet for Strings no 3 "Cantari alla madrigalesca" (2)
Quartet for Strings no 4 (2)
Quartet for Strings no 5 "dei capricci" (1)
Quartet for Strings no 6 "L'Arca di Noè" (1)
Quartet for Strings no 7 (1)
Quartet for Strings no 8 "per Elisabetta" (1)
Ricercari (1)
Serenata for Bassoon and I0 instruments/Small Orchestra (2)
Serenata mattutina (1)
Sinfonia del mare (1)
Sinfonia dello zodiaco (2)
Sinfonia in un tempo (2)
Sinfonia per Antigenida (2)
Sinfonie del silenzio e de la morte (2)
Sinfonie del silenzio e della morte: Danza tragica (1)
Sinfonie del silenzio e della morte: Il molino della morte (1)
Sinfonie del silenzio e della morte: Sinfonia del silenzio (1)
Sonata a 3 (1)
Sonata for Cello and Piano in D minor (1)
Sonatina for Cello and Piano (2)
Stradivario (2)
Symphony no 1 "in quattro tempi, come le quattro stagioni" (2)
Symphony no 10 "atropo" (2)
Symphony no 11 "della cornamuse" (2)
Symphony no 2 "elegiaca" (2)
Symphony no 3 "delle campane" (2)
Symphony no 4 "in memoriam Natalia Koussevitsky" (2)
Symphony no 5 "concertante, in eco" (2)
Symphony no 6 (1)
Symphony no 7 "delle canzoni" (2)
Symphony no 8 "Symphoniae brevis" (2)
Symphony no 9 "dell'ahimè" (2)
Symphony No. 1 ("in quattro tempi, come le quattro stagioni"): Quasi andante. Sereno (1)
Symphony No. 1 ("in quattro tempi. come le quattro stagioni"): Allegro (1)
Symphony No. 1 ("in quattro tempi. come le quattro stagioni"): Allegro, quasi allegretto (1)
Symphony No. 1 ("in quattro tempi. come le quattro stagioni"): Lento, ma non troppo (1)
Symphony No. 2 ("elegiaca"): Allegro non troppo (1)
Symphony No. 2 ("elegiaca"): Lento (1)
Symphony No. 2 ("elegiaca"): Lento non troppo (1)
Symphony No. 2 ("elegiaca"): Mosso (1)
Symphony No. 6 "degli archi": Allegro (1)
Symphony No. 6 "degli archi": Allegro vivo (1)
Symphony No. 6 "degli archi": Lento ma non troppo - Allegro - Lento - Allegro - Molto triste (1)
Symphony No. 6 "degli archi": Piuttosto lento (1)
Tre commedie goldoniane: Symphonic Fragments (2)
Variazioni senza tema (1)
Vivaldiana (2)
Biography by James Reel
Extremely prolific, somewhat uneven, and tremendously influential, Gian Francesco Malipiero came to be regarded as the most original musical mind of his day and place. His music fused modern techniques with the stylistic qualities of early Italian music.

In his youth Malipiero briefly enrolled as a violin student at the Vienna Conservatory, and also studied in Venice and Bologna (where he obtained a diploma in composition from the G.B. Martini Music School in 1904). In 1913 he traveled to Paris, where he was influenced by French Impressionism, with its fondness for enriching harmonies with sixths, ninths, and elevenths. He was also transformed by attending the premiere of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, which so caused him to rethink his aesthetics that he suppressed all the music he'd written to that time. Yet, something of a paleo-nationalist, Malipiero found even greater inspiration in Italian Baroque polyphony, which he had discovered on his own and begun transcribing from library manuscripts as early as 1902. His academic interests also led him to accept intermittent teaching and administrative appointments. In 1921 he became professor of composition at the Parma Conservatory for two years. Later he was director of the Instituto Musicale Pollini at Padua, and in 1939 he became director of the Liceo Benedetto Marcello in Venice.

Malipiero initially produced works that, although often harmonically dense and oddly structured, reflect the spirit of seventeenth and eighteenth century Venetian music. His compositions are characteristically contrapuntal, with some dissonance resulting from the counterpoint. His best music often bases its tonality on free use of diatonic material, although Malipiero employed chromaticism more aggressively in his later years.

Malipiero's principal works, among the hundreds he produced during his long career, include the operas L'orfeide (1918-1922) and Venere prigioniera (Captive Venus, 1957); the cantata or "mystery" San Francesco d'Assisi (1922); the oratorio La Passione (1935); and about sixteen free-form symphonies, eleven of them numbered. Among his other orchestral works are Pause del silenzio (1917), a response to World War I, which deeply traumatized him; Impressioni dal vero (Impression of Truth, 1910-1922); and Fantasie di ogni giorni (Fantasy of Every Day, 1954). His chamber works include seven string quartets, of which the first, Rispetti e strambotti (Regards and Folderol, 1920), has circulated more widely than any of his other compositions.

Much of this work is characterized by varying degrees of Expressionism, dissonance, and modality. Malipiero's most original and cohesive period was 1917-1929, although certain pieces from his predominantly diatonic middle period, such as the First Violin Concerto (1932), have found greater audience favor, using as they do an ecstatic lyricism that replaced the more anguished tone of his earlier work. His compositions from the late 1940s on became more chromatic and subdued. Malipiero also made important contributions to musical scholarship. He edited the complete works of Monteverdi, a widely criticized yet pioneering endeavor. He also collaborated on a collected edition of the works of Vivaldi; edited works of Corelli, Frescobaldi, and others; and wrote many articles for scholarly journals.
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