Arrigo, Girolamo

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Arrigo, Girolamo

Arrigo, Girolamo, Italian composer; b. Palermo, April 2, 1930. He studied at the Palermo Cons., and later in Rome and Paris. His works are mostly in small forms, and virtually all with programmatic connotations. The most important among them are 3 occasioni for Soprano and 32 Instruments (1958), Quarta occasione for 7 Voices, Horn, Viola, Mandolin, Guitar, and Celesta (1959), Fluxus for 9 Instruments (1959), Episodi for Soprano and Flute, to texts by ancient Greek poets (1963), Shadows for Orch. (1965), and Infrarosso for 16 Instruments (1967). He also wrote a “collage opera,” Orden (1969), consisting of several not necessarily related numbers, to texts in French, Italian, and Spanish, and an “epopée musicale,” Addio Garibaldi (Paris, Oct. 10, 1972).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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