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Alfredo Casella
July 25, 1883 - March 5, 1947
born in Turin, Italy, composed during the Modern period
Biography
Alfredo Casella was an outstanding if uneven composer who led several of his contemporaries -- Respighi, Malipiero, Pizzetti, and others -- in a struggle to modernize Italian music. His interests as a composer and as an author of articles on music were highly cosmopolitan, as may be gathered from his early enthusiasms for Debussy, the Russian nationalists, Strauss, Bartók, and Schoenberg. Yet Casella was also intensely inspired by Italian culture, both its folkways and its Futurism movement.

His formal studies began in 1896 at the Paris Conservatory, under Fauré; he won first prize in piano in 1899, and soon was touring Europe and Russia as a pianist. He also began accepting guest-conducting stints in the early years of the century, a pursuit that would greatly occupy his time after World War I. But before the war the piano was his primary pastime, especially while he served as a keyboard instructor at the Paris Conservatory from 1912 to 1915. He spent most of the war back in Rome, succeeding Sgambati as piano professor at the Santa Cecilia Academy. In 1917 he founded the short-lived Società Nazionale di Musica, which produced controversial concerts of modern Italian and foreign music. Meanwhile, Casella was also one of the figures -- again, including Respighi -- pushing for a revival of Renaissance and Baroque Italian music.
Selected Discography