<<Up Contents
Giuseppe Verdi's compositions
Opera
- Oberto, Conte di San Bonifacio (17.11.1839 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in 2 acts, Temistocle Solera[?].
- Un giorno di regno (5.9.1840 Teatro alla Scala, Milan) [Il finto Stanislao]. Melodramma giocoso in 2 acts, Felice Romani[?], after the comedy Le Faux Stanislas by Alexandre Vincent Pineu-Duval[?].
- Nabucodonosor (9.3.1842 Teatro alla Scala, Milan) (Nabucco[?]). Opera in 4 parts, Temistocle Solera[?], after the play Nabucodonosor by Anicet-Bourgeois[?] and Francis Cornue[?].
- I lombardi alla prima crociata (11.2.1843 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in 4 acts, Temistocle Solera[?], after the poem of the same name by Tommaso Grossi[?].
- Ernani (9.3.1844 Teatro la Fenice, Venice). Opera in 4 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after the play Hernani by Victor Hugo.
- I due Foscari (3.11.1844 Teatro Argentina, Rome). Opera in 3 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after Lord Byron's play The Two Foscari.
- Giovanna d'Arco (15.2.1845 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in a prologue & 3 acts, Temistocle Solera[?], after Friedrich Schiller's drama Die Jungfrau von Orleans.
- Alzira (12.8.1845 Teatro San Carlo, Naples). Opera in a prologue and 2 acts, Salvatore Cammarano[?], after Voltaire's tragedy Alzire, ou les Américains.
- Attila (17.3.1846 Teatro la Fenice, Venice). Opera in a prologue & 3 acts, Temistocle Solera[?] (and Francesco Maria Piave[?]), after the play Attila, König der Hunnen by Zacharias Werner.
- Macbeth (14.3.1847 Teatro della Pergola, Florence). Opera in 4 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after William Shakespeare's play.
- I masnadieri. (22.7.1847 Her Majesty's Theatre, London). Opera in 4 acts, Andrea Maffei[?], after Friedrich Schiller's drama Die Räuber
- Jérusalem [rev of I lombardi] (26.11.1847 Académie Royale de Musique, Paris). Opera in 4 acts, Alphonse Royer[?] & Gustave Vaëz[?].
- Il corsaro (25.10.1848 Teatro Grande, Trieste). Opera in 3 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after George Gordon Byron[?]'s poem The Corsair.
- La battaglia di Legnano (27.1.1849 Teatro Argentina, Rome). Opera in 4 acts, Salvatore Cammarano[?], after the play La Battaille de Toulouse by Joseph Méry[?].
- Luisa Miller[?] (8.12.1849 Teatro San Carlo, Naples). Opera in 3 acts, Salvatore Cammarano[?], after Friedrich Schiller's drama Kabale und Liebe.
- Stiffelio (16.11.1850 Teatro Grande, Trieste). Opera in 3 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after the play Le Pasteur, ou L'Évangile et le Foyer by Émile Souvestre[?] and Eugène Bourgeois[?].
- Rigoletto (11.3.1851 Teatro la Fenice, Venice). Opera in 3 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after the drama Le Roi s'amuse by Victor Hugo.
- Il Trovatore (19.1.1853 Teatro Apollo, Rome). Opera in 4 acts, Salvatore Cammarano[?] (and Leone Emanuele Bardare), after the play El Trovador by Antonio García Gutiérrez.
- La traviata[?] (6.3.1853 Teatro la Fenice, Venice). Opera in 4 parts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], after the play La Dame aux camélias by Alexandre Dumas, fils
- Les vêpres siciliennes (13.6.1855 Académie Impériale de Musique, Paris). Grand opera in 5 acts, Eugène Scribe[?] & Charles Duveyrier[?], after their libretto Le Duc d'Albe
- Giovanna de Guzman (I vespri siciliani) [rev of Les vêpres siciliennes] (26.12.1855 Teatro Regio, Parma). Eugène Scribe[?] & Eugenio Caimi.
- Simon Boccanegra[?] (12.3.1857 Teatro la Fenice, Venice). Opera in a prologue and 3 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?] (and Giuseppe Montanelli), after the play Simon Bocanegra by Antonio García Gutiérrez.
- Aroldo [rev of Stiffelio] (16.8.1857 Teatro Nuovo, Rimini). Opera in 4 parts, Francesco Maria Piave[?]
- Un ballo in maschera[?] (17.2.1859 Teatro Apollo, Rome) Opera in 3 acts, Antonio Somma[?], after Eugène Scribe[?]'s libretto Gustave III.
- La forza del destino[?] (10.11.1862 Bolshoy Kamennïy Teatr, St. Petersburg). Opera in 4 acts, Francesco Maria Piave[?], (and Andrea Maffei[?]) after the play Don Alvaro, o La Fuerza del sino by Angel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas, and Schiller's drama Wallensteins Lager.
- Macbeth [rev] (19.4.1865 Théâtre Lyrique, Paris).
- Don Carlos (11.3.1867 Académie Impériale de Musique, Paris) Grand opera in 5 acts, Joseph Méry[?] & Camille du Locle[?], after Friedrich Schiller's dramatic poem Don Carlos, Infant von Spanien
- La forza del destino [rev] (27.2.1869 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Libretto additions by Antonio Ghislanzoni[?]
- Aida (24.12.1871 Opera House, Cairo). Opera in 4 acts, Antonio Ghislanzoni[?], from a scenario by Auguste Mariette[?].
- Don Carlo [rev of Don Carlos] (1872, Naples). Translation by Achille de Lauzières[?], with additions by Antonio Ghislanzoni[?].
- Simon Boccanegra [rev] (24.3.1881 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Libretto additions and changes by Arrigo Boito.
- La force du destin [rev of La forza del destino] (14.3.1883, Antwerp). Libretto translated and adapted by Charles Nuitter & Camille du Locle[?].
- Don Carlo [rev 2 of Don Carlos] (10.1.1884 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in 4 acts.
- Don Carlo [rev 3 of Don Carlos] (29.12.1886, Modena). Opera in 4 acts.
- Otello (5.2.1887 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in 4 acts, Arrigo Boito, after William Shakespeare's Othello.
- Falstaff (9.2.1893 Teatro alla Scala, Milan). Opera in 3 acts, Arrigo Boito, after William Shakespeare's Falstaff and Henry IV, (1 & 2).
Other Works
- Inno delle Nazioni (1862, London)
- String Quartet in e (1873)
- Requiem (22.5.1874, Church of San Marco, Milan): mass in memory of Alessandro Manzoni, for four solo voices, chorus, and orchestra
- Pater noster (1873): for 5-part chorus
- Ave Maria (1880): for soprano and strings
- Quattro Pezzi sacri (7.4.1898, Grande Opéra, Paris):
- Ave Maria: for mixed chorus
- Stabat Mater: for mixed chorus
- Laudi alla Vergine Maria: for female chorus
- Te Deum: for double chorus and orchestra
wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump