Liuzzi, Fernando
Liuzzi, Fernando
Liuzzi, Fernando, Italian composer and pedagogue; b. Senigallia, Dec. 19, 1884; d. Florence, Oct. 6, 1940. He received training in piano and composition with Fano in Bologna, where he also attended the Univ. (fine arts degree, 1905), and then pursued his studies with Falchi at Rome’s Accademia di Santa Cecilia and with Reger and Motti in Munich. Liuzzi was prof. of theory at the Parma Cons. (1910-17), and also was a teacher of composition at the Naples Cons. (1912-14). After serving as prof. of theory at the Florence Cons. (1917-23), he was prof. of musical aesthetics at the univs. of Florence (1923-27) and Rome (1927-38). With the promulgation of the Fascist racial laws, he went to Belgium in 1939. After a sojourn in N.Y., he returned to his homeland in 1940. Among his writings were Estetica della musica (Florence, 1924) and Musicista italiani in Francia (Rome, 1946).
Works
L’augellin bel verde, puppet opera (Rome, 1917); Le vergini savie e le vergini folli, liturgical drama after a 12th-century French MS (Florence, 1930); La Passione for Soloists, Chorus, and Orch. (1930); orch. music; chamber pieces; songs.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire