Jump to content

Francesco Santoliquido: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Schissel (talk | contribs)
authcontrol. stub!
Schissel (talk | contribs)
string quartet, symphony, etc.
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Francesco Santoliquido''' (1883–1971) was an Italian [[composer]]. He studied at the [[Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia|Liceo di Santa Cecilia]] in [[Rome]], graduating in 1908.<ref>Song: a guide to style and literature Carol Kimball - 2000 "Francesco Santoliquido (1883–1971) Francesco Santoliquido studied at the Liceo di Santa Cecilia in Rome. After graduating in 1908, ..."</ref> His best-known works are his ''Tre Poesie Persiane'', for voice and piano recorded by [[Amel Brahim-Djelloul]] and Anne Le Bozec in 2008.
'''Francesco Santoliquido''' (1883–1971) was an Italian [[composer]]. He studied at the [[Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia|Liceo di Santa Cecilia]] in [[Rome]], graduating in 1908.<ref>Song: a guide to style and literature Carol Kimball - 2000 "Francesco Santoliquido (1883–1971) Francesco Santoliquido studied at the Liceo di Santa Cecilia in Rome. After graduating in 1908, ..."</ref> His best-known works are his ''Tre Poesie Persiane'', for voice and piano recorded by [[Amel Brahim-Djelloul]] and Anne Le Bozec in 2008.

His compositions included a [[violin sonata]]<ref>published c.1927 - {{OCLC|844361870}}</ref>, a [[string quartet]]<ref>published 1931 - {{OCLC|844361868}}</ref>, a [[symphony]]<ref>announced as forthcoming (''erscheint demnächst'' in the 16 February 1921 issue of [[Melos]] (http://www.archive.org/stream/Melos02.jg.1921/Melos021921#page/n90/mode/1up) and published by Grandi of Rome in the same year ({{OCLC|8944543}})</ref> among other works including as noted a number for voice.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 13:38, 30 May 2014

Francesco Santoliquido (1883–1971) was an Italian composer. He studied at the Liceo di Santa Cecilia in Rome, graduating in 1908.[1] His best-known works are his Tre Poesie Persiane, for voice and piano recorded by Amel Brahim-Djelloul and Anne Le Bozec in 2008.

His compositions included a violin sonata[2], a string quartet[3], a symphony[4] among other works including as noted a number for voice.

References

  1. ^ Song: a guide to style and literature Carol Kimball - 2000 "Francesco Santoliquido (1883–1971) Francesco Santoliquido studied at the Liceo di Santa Cecilia in Rome. After graduating in 1908, ..."
  2. ^ published c.1927 - OCLC 844361870
  3. ^ published 1931 - OCLC 844361868
  4. ^ announced as forthcoming (erscheint demnächst in the 16 February 1921 issue of Melos (http://www.archive.org/stream/Melos02.jg.1921/Melos021921#page/n90/mode/1up) and published by Grandi of Rome in the same year (OCLC 8944543)

External links

Template:Persondata