Enrico Bevignani: Difference between revisions
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One letter from Tchaikovsky to Enrico Bevignani has survived, dating from 1881, and has been translated into English on this website: | One letter from Tchaikovsky to Enrico Bevignani has survived, dating from 1881, and has been translated into English on this website: | ||
* '''[[Letter 1693a]]''' – 23 February/7 March 1881, from [[Rome]] | * '''[[Letter 1693a]]''' – 23 February/7 March 1881, from [[Rome]] | ||
One letter from Bevignani to the composer, dating from 1881, is preserved in the {{RUS-KLč}} at [[Klin]]. | One letter from Bevignani to the composer, dating from 13/25 February 1881, is preserved in the {{RUS-KLč}} at [[Klin]] (a{{sup|4}}, No. 202). | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== |
Latest revision as of 19:24, 13 August 2023
Italian conductor and composer (b. 29 September 1841 [N.S.] in Naples; d. 29 August 1903 [N.S.] in Vomero, near Naples), born Enrico Modesto Bevignani.
After studying for several years at the Naples Conservatory, where he took the highest honours, Bevignani moved to London in 1864. Here he entered into a long association with the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where he was conductor for 25 years. From 1872, he was the concertmaster of the Italian and Russian Opera companies in Moscow and Saint Petersburg, and also toured in New York during the last decade of the nineteenth century.
In 1881, he was the conductor of the first production of Tchaikovsky's Yevgeny Onegin at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.
Correspondence with Tchaikovsky
One letter from Tchaikovsky to Enrico Bevignani has survived, dating from 1881, and has been translated into English on this website:
- Letter 1693a – 23 February/7 March 1881, from Rome
One letter from Bevignani to the composer, dating from 13/25 February 1881, is preserved in the Tchaikovsky State Memorial Musical Museum-Reserve at Klin (a4, No. 202).