Gian Carlo Menotti - Concerto for 3 Instrumental Groups (1/3)

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Uploaded by on Oct 15, 2010

Gian Carlo Menotti (July 7, 1911 - February 1, 2007) was an Italian-American composer and librettist. Although he often referred to himself as an American composer, he kept his Italian citizenship.

Triple Concerto a Tre (1970)

1. Allegro

Group 1: violin, viola and cello
Group 2: piano, harp and percussion
Group 3 : oboe, clarinet and bassoon

London Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Amos

Menotti wrote the libretti for two of Samuel Barber's operas, Vanessa and A Hand of Bridge, as well as revising the libretto for Antony and Cleopatra. Amelia al Ballo is the only one of Menotti's operas still to be published in its original or perhaps "complementary" Italian libretto (alongside the English) (see Ricordi editions 1937, 1976 and recent): it is an adept example of Italianate style (with a nod to but not an imitation of Puccini and Mascagni) and it is unjustly neglected. It was, however, at the time so successful that NBC commissioned an opera specifically for radio, The Old Maid and the Thief, one of the first such works. Following this, he wrote a ballet, Sebastian (1944), and a piano concerto (1945) before returning to opera with The Medium and The Telephone, or L'Amour à trois.

His first full-length opera, The Consul, which premiered in 1950, won both the Pulitzer Prize for Music and the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Musical Play of the Year (the latter in 1954). He intended to give a role to a then-unknown Maria Callas, but the producer would not have it. In 1951, Menotti wrote his beloved Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors for NBC. It was the first opera ever written for television in America, and first aired on Christmas Eve, 1951. It was such a success that it became an annual Christmas tradition and remains Menotti's most popular work to this day. Menotti won a second Pulitzer Prize for his opera The Saint of Bleecker Street in 1955. With Goya Menotti reverted to a traditional Giovane Scuola Italian style - perhaps written 80 years too late, it might well have established itself (for a while at least) in the repertoire in an earlier period. But in a modernist world Menotti's work was rejected.

Menotti also wrote several ballets and numerous choral works. Of these, notable is his cantata The Death of the Bishop of Brindisi, written in 1963, and the cantata Landscapes and Remembrances in 1976- a descriptive work of Menotti's memories of America written for the Bicentennial. Of note is a small Mass commissioned by the Archdiocese of Baltimore to be used as Catholic service music- Mass for the Contemporary English Liturgy. He also wrote a violin concerto, symphonies, and a stage play, The Leper. It was in the field of opera, however, that he made his most notable contributions to American cultural life.

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