Giuseppe Manzino
Selected Piano Works - Vol. 1
- Editor: Italo Vescovo
- Publisher: Ut Orpheus
- Code: XXS 101
- In Stock
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€ 13.95
Quattro schizzi Op. 9; Toccata Op. 10; Studio Op. 11; Fantasia Op. 16
Author: Giuseppe Manzino (1929-1992)
Editor: Italo Vescovo
Publication Date: 10/17/2015
Pages: pp. 32
Size: 230x310 mm
Binding: Saddle stitching
ISMN: 979-0-2153-2336-0
Code: XXS 101


He occasionally gave recitals, above all on the organ, and performed chamber music, but he dedicated himself above all to composition, obtaining recognition and awards in various national competitions. He wrote instrumental, vocal, chamber and symphonic music (including ‘Trittico savonese’, 1976) and also a one act opera (’Binario’, 1957) to a libretto by the Futurist poet and painter Vittorio Tommasini (Farfa). His Sonata (I) per organo received the gold medal at the XVIII Concorso Internazionale di Composizione “G.B. Viotti” in Vercelli in 1967, and the Corale variato for organ won a prize in the first “Concorso V. Carrara” in 1969. Compositions of his have been performed in Italy and in the United States, Latin America, Switzerland, Germany, Hungary, Sweden, as well as being broadcast on the radio in Spain and Italy. He had works published by Ricordi, Carrara, Carisch, Edipan, Bèrben and Forberg, while most of his output has appeared (or is being prepared for publication) in Ut Orpheus Edizioni, Bologna.
Giuseppe Manzino died in Savona on 4 July 1992.
Piano Journal Magazine 112 (Autumn 2017)
... These volumes form a small part of Manzino's compositions for piano and give us an insight into the uniquely original neo-classical style mixed with discords which Manzino introduced in the twentieth century. All these pieces are ideal for Recitals and would add welcome new contemporary material for Intermediate and Advanced students looking for short new works to include in concert programmes. (Nadia Lasserson)
... These volumes form a small part of Manzino's compositions for piano and give us an insight into the uniquely original neo-classical style mixed with discords which Manzino introduced in the twentieth century. All these pieces are ideal for Recitals and would add welcome new contemporary material for Intermediate and Advanced students looking for short new works to include in concert programmes. (Nadia Lasserson)