Leone Sinigaglia


Leone Sinigaglia was an Italian composer and mountaineer.

Biography

Born in Turin in 1868 to upper-middle-class Jewish parents, Sinigaglia studied music at its conservatory of music with Giovanni Bolzoni. Sinigaglia knew the leading figures of thought, arts and science in the city, such as Galileo Ferraris, Cesare Lombroso, and Leonardo Bistolfi. A lover of literature and mountaineering from an early age, the young Sinigaglia spent many holidays in or near Cavoretto, just outside the city, which would provide him with much inspiration. Among the works composed in these years are the Romanza opus 3 for horn and string quartet. This has been recorded in an arrangement for horn and string orchestra.
In 1888 Sinigaglia began to travel: after spells in several European cities, he lived from 1894 in Vienna, where he associated with Johannes Brahms from whom he developed a taste for so-called absolute music, studying with Eusebius Mandyczewski. In these years, he wrote several Lieder and the Concerto for violin and orchestra, opus 20.
From 1900 he worked in Prague with Antonín Dvořák. From Dvořák, he learned to apply classical techniques to the arrangement of popular songs.
His productivity diminished progressively in the following decades. Nazi police occupied Turin in 1944 and he was to be sent to Germany as a slave labourer at the age of 76 but suffered a fatal heart attack at the moment of his arrest.

Musical works

In the ten years that followed his return to Turin in 1901, Sinigaglia transcribed an enormous amount of popular song from the oral tradition, largely collected on the hills of Cavoretto. Many of these were arranged for singer and pianoforte in a style that is reminiscent of the German songs of the late 19th century: they include a set of twelve Old popular songs of Piedmont . As well as this collection, for which Sinigaglia's name is still remembered, his other compositions of the same period show a deep love for the musical spirit of his native region, for example in the two Piedmontese Dances opus 31 and the Suite for orchestra "Piemonte" . Both of these are closely identified with the name of Arturo Toscanini, who performed them frequently.
It was not only ethnically-inspired works that resulted from these happy years: the overture to The Chiozzotte Quarrels, as well as the Piedmontese works, were directed by conductors of the calibre of Wilhelm Furtwängler and John Barbirolli. Toscanini included the music in broadcast concerts by the NBC Symphony Orchestra. Among his chamber works that are still remembered are the two sonatas, opus 41 for cello and pianoforte, and opus 44 for violin and pianoforte.

Mountaineering

Sinigaglia was a keen mountain climber in his youth, amassing an impressive catalogue of ascents in the Dolomites. He has been described as "the first great Italian climber in the Dolomites". Two of his most famous climbs were first ascents of Cima Ambrizzola and Monte Cristallo. His book, Climbing reminiscences of the Dolomites, was published in English in 1898, shortly after the Italian edition, and is still regarded as a classic of climbing literature.

Other compositions

Chamber works

String orchestra (or with string orchestra)

  • Adagio tragico, opus 21

Orchestra

  • Lamento in memoria di un giovane artista, opus 38. Published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1930.
  • Ouvertüre zu Goldonis Lustspiel Le Baruffe Chiozzotte, opus 32. Published by Breitkopf & Härtel in 1908.
  • Piemonte: suite per orchestra sopra temi popolari, opus 36. In 4 sections.

Documents

Letters by Leone Sinigaglia are held by the State Archives in Leipzig, company archives of the Music Publishing House C.F.Peters.