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Sylvano Bussotti (1 October 1931 – 19 September 2021) was an Italian composer of contemporary classical music, also a painter, set and costume designer, opera director and manager, writer and academic teacher. His compositions employ graphic notation, which has often created special problems of interpretation. He was known as a composer for the stage. His first opera was La Passion selon Sade, premiered in Palermo in 1965. Later operas and ballets were premiered at the Teatro Comunale di Firenze, Teatro Lirico di Milano, Teatro Regio di Torino and Piccola Scala di Milano, among others. He was artistic director of La Fenice in Venice, the Puccini Festival and the music section of the Venice Biennale. He taught internationally, for a decade at the Fiesole School of Music. He is regarded as a leading composer of Italy's avantgarde,[1] and a Renaissance man with many talents who combined the arts expressively.[2]

Sylvano Bussotti
Bussotti in 2006
Born(1931-10-01)1 October 1931
Florence, Italy
Died19 September 2021(2021-09-19) (aged 89)
Milan, Italy
EducationFlorence Conservatory
OccupationComposer, painter, designer
Organizations
SpouseRocco Quaglia
AwardsISCM Prize

Life and career


Born in Florence,[3] Bussotti learned to play the violin beginning before the age of five with Margherita Castellani,[4] becoming a prodigy.[5] He was also introduced to painting, by his uncle Tono Zancanaro and his older brother Renzo. At the Florence Conservatory, he studied harmony and counterpoint with Roberto Lupi, and piano with Luigi Dallapiccola, but achieved no diploma due to World War II.[5][3] He kept studying composition on his own. From 1956, he studied privately in Paris with Max Deutsch, and met Luigi Nono, Pierre Boulez and Heinz-Klaus Metzger who introduced him to the Darmstädter Ferienkurse. His first composition performed in public was Breve, played by Françoise Deslogères at a gallery in Düsseldorf in 1958, with John Cage in the audience.[5] In Paris, Cathy Berberian sang his works, conducted by Boulez.[4] Bussotti travelled to the U.S. in 1964 and 1965, visiting Buffalo and New York invited by the Rockefeller Foundation. In 1972, he visited Berlin, invited by German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) for the Ford Foundation.[5]

As a composer he was influenced by the twelve-tone music of Webern and later John Cage. Examples of his use of graphic notation in his pieces, often reflecting his personal life, included La Passion selon Sade and Lorenzaccio. He was a composer of the Florentine artistic current, that has been active since the end of World War II up to the present, including Giuseppe Chiari, Giancarlo Cardini, Albert Mayr, Marcello Aitiani, Sergio Maltagliati, Daniele Lombardi, and Pietro Grossi. These musicians experimented with the interaction between sound, sign, and vision, a synaesthetics of art derived from historical avant-gardes, from Kandinsky to futurism, to Scriabin and Schoenberg, all the way to Bauhaus.[5]

Cathy Berberian and Bussotti
Cathy Berberian and Bussotti

Bussotti also pursued other disciplines including painting, graphic art, and journalism.[3] He was a well-known film director, actor, and singer. He wrote most of the librettos for his operas. As a writer, his style was considered one of the most refined among the Italian poets and novelists of the 20th century. French culture fascinated him since he was a boy. His great friend Cathy Berberian (Luciano Berio's wife) was one of his most famous interpreters. He was well acquainted with writers and film directors Aldo Palazzeschi, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Derek Jarman, Elsa Morante, Alberto Moravia, Aldo Braibanti, Mario Zanzotto, Fabio Casadei Turroni, Dacia Maraini, and Umberto Eco. Jarman was the director of his opera L'Ispirazione, first staged in Florence in 1988.[5] Rara Film is his most celebrated underground film. The silent film, according to the author's instructions, should be performed, together with the score, played by seven to eleven players. The music of Rara Film is not a strict counterpoint of the film, flowing without any relation to the images.[6]

Bussotti was the stage director of Mussorgsky's The Fair at Sorochyntsi for La Scala in Milan in 1981, followed two years later by Puccini's Il trittico, a televised production for which he designed the set of Gianni Schicchi.[2] He served as the artistic director of La Fenice in Venice, directed the Puccini Festival in Torre del Lago,[5] and was director of opera at La Scala.[3] He was head of the music section of the Venice Biennale from 1987. He taught composition, analysis and the history of musical theatre at the Academy of Fine Arts in L'Aquila, at the Internationale Bachakademie Stuttgart in Stuttgart, at the Royan Festival and from 1980 to 1991 at the Fiesole School of Music.[5] As a personality, he was notoriously flamboyant and occasionally shocking. Openly gay, Bussotti expressed his sexuality in his music as early as 1958, when it was socially dangerous to do so.[2] His partner and spouse was Rocco Quaglia,[1] a ballet dancer and choreographer with whom he collaborated in many projects.[2][7]

Bussotti died at a nursing home in Milan at age 89 after a long illness, shortly before his 90th birthday.[1][8] Festivities planned in Florence for the event are held in his memory, titled 90 Bussotti, from 20 to 25 September,[1] including performances by Fabbrica Europa [it], Florence Queer Festival, Fondazione Culturale Stensen, Maschietto Editore, and Tempo Reale, collaborating with Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Bussotti Opera Ballet and the Museo Marino Marini.[1][3] In Germany, from September 29 to October 1, a scientific conference was held on Bussotti's work,[9] in the course of which the Ensemble E-MEX played two commemorative concerts. This included the first complete performance of Bussotti's "Piêces de Chair II" (1960), sung, among others, by soprano Monica Benvenuti, who had long been closely associated with the composer.[10]


Awards


Bussotti was awarded the ISCM Prize from the International Society for Contemporary Music in 1961, 1963 and 1965, then in 1967 the All'Amelia Prize at the Venice Biennale, in 1974 the Toscani d'Oggi Prize, and in 1979 the Psacaropulo Prize.[5]


Works



Music


Most of Bussotti's works were published by Casa Ricordi:[4][5]


Stage works



Other compositions



Novels and poems


Bussotti's writings included:[5]


Notes and references


Notes

  1. Recording at the London Music Digest, Roundhouse London, 1970s, The London Music Digest at Discogs; Sylvano Bussotti: Per tre sul piano (audio) on YouTube, Roger Woodward
  2. Recording at the London Music Digest, Roundhouse London, 1970s; Sylvano Bussotti: Pour Clavier (audio) on YouTube, Roger Woodward

References

  1. "Bussotti dies on the eve of the 90 Bussotti, the party becomes a tribute to the great composer". Teller Report. 19 September 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  2. "Sylvano Bussotti: flamboyant composer, poet, set and costume designer, theatre director, and… and… and…". Gramilano. 27 December 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  3. "Musica, addio al compositore Sylvano Bussotti: Firenze si preparava a festeggiare i 90 anni". La Stampa (in Italian). 20 September 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
  4. "Sylvano Bussotti". Casa Ricordi. 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
  5. "Sylvano Bussotti (biography, works, resources)" (in French and English). IRCAM.
  6. Frandzel, Benjamin (30 November 2010). "A Rare Silent Film From an Experimental Composer". San Francisco Classical Voice. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  7. Attinello, Paul (2002), "Bussotti, Sylvano", glbtq.com
  8. Mort de Sylvano Bussotti, compositeur, homme de théâtre et provocateur on France Musique
  9. "Perspectives on Sylvano Bussotti | H-Soz-Kult. Kommunikation und Fachinformation für die Geschichtswissenschaften | Geschichte im Netz | History in the web". H-Soz-Kult. Kommunikation und Fachinformation für die Geschichtswissenschaften. 14 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  10. "ATTACCA! – E-MEX". Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  11. Honegger, Marc (1993). "Bussoti, Sylvano". Dictionnaire de la musique: Les hommes et leurs oeuvres. Gale.
  12. Sabbe, Herman (1990). "Bussotti, Sylvano". Algemene muziek encyclopedie. Gale.
  13. Broeker, Tobias (2016). "Bussotti, Sylvano (1931 –)". The 20th century violin concertante: A repertoire catalogue.

Further reading





На других языках


[de] Sylvano Bussotti

Sylvano Bussotti (* 1. Oktober 1931 in Florenz; † 19. September 2021 in Mailand[1]) war ein italienischer Komponist und Künstler.
- [en] Sylvano Bussotti

[es] Sylvano Bussotti

Sylvano Bussotti (Florencia, 1 de octubre de 1931-Milán, 19 de septiembre de 2021)[1] fue un artista italiano, especialmente conocido como compositor, aunque también practicó la pintura, la poesía, la novela, la dirección teatral y cinematográfica, el canto o la escenografía. Fue miembro de la Academia Nacional de Santa Cecilia.

[it] Sylvano Bussotti

Silvano Bussotti detto Sylvano (Firenze, 1º ottobre 1931 – Milano, 19 settembre 2021[1]) è stato un compositore e artista italiano.

[ru] Буссотти, Сильвано

Сильва́но Буссо́тти (итал. Sylvano Bussotti; 1 октября 1931, Флоренция, Тоскана, Италия — 19 сентября 2021) — итальянский композитор, художник и оперный режиссёр.



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