Lucia Contini Anselmi
{{Short description|Italian pianist and composer}}
Lucia Contini Anselmi (15 October 1876 – after 1913) was an Italian pianist and composer. She studied piano with Giovanni Sgambati and composition with Alessandro Parisotti at the Conservatory in Rome. After completing her studies, she toured as a concert pianist. She received a gold medal for Ludentia at the International Competition for Composers at Perugia in 1913, and was received by Queen Margherita.
Life
Lucia Contini Anselmi was born on 15 October 1876 in Vercelli, Piedmont.{{Cite book |last1=Sadie |first1=Julie Anne |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IvoQQU1QL_QC&q=Norton+grove+Lucia+Contini+Anselmi&pg=PA18 |title=The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers |last2=Samuel |first2=Rhian |publisher=W. W. Norton & Company |year=1994 |isbn=9780393034875 |pages=127 |access-date=4 October 2010}} was an Italian pianist and composer. She studied piano with Giovanni Sgambati and composition with Alessandro Parisotti at the Conservatory in Rome. After completing her studies, she toured as a concert pianist in Italy and overseas. She received a gold medal for her piano work Ludentia at the International Competition for Composers at Perugia in 1913.{{cite web |author=Perruccio, Francesca Sica |title=Anselmi, Lucia Contini |url=http://www.intreccifemminili.com/Ita/Contini_I.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090422190300/http://www.intreccifemminili.com/Ita/Contini_I.html |archive-date=22 April 2009 |access-date=10 October 2010}} Contini Anselmi's fame allowed her a personal reception by Queen Margherita of Italy.{{Cite book |last=Cohen |first=Aaron I. |title=International Encyclopedia of Women Composers |publisher=Books & Music (USA) |year=1987 |isbn=0-9617485-0-8 |edition=2nd |location=South Africa |pages=162}}
Contini Anselmi composed more than thirty works, mostly for piano but also eight for orchestra, three for violin and piano. She also composed a ballet, Driadi e satiri (Dryads and Satyrs), and an operetta, La Sponda Magica (The Magic Shore), a fairy opera in three acts. She published a treatise in 1908 Della tecnica per l’esecuzione della musica sul pianoforte e sua interpretazione (On the technique of performing music on the piano and its interpretation).{{Cite thesis |last=Nelson |first=Quilby |title=Performing the undiscovered solo piano works of Italian composer Lucia Contini Anselmi (1876-1913) |date=2022 |degree=Master's thesis |publisher=University of Melbourne |url=http://hdl.handle.net/11343/315712}}
Her death date is unknown, although it is generally agree that she died after 1913. Some of her works were performed at the University of Melbourne in 2020.
Works
Anselmi's works include compositions for orchestra, solo piano, violin and cello. Selected works include:
- Prelude
- Gavotte
- Minuet
- Sonata for Piano in C minor
- Sibylla Cumaea
- Ludentia
- Inno guerresco
References
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Category:19th-century Italian women composers
Category:20th-century Italian women composers
Category:Italian Romantic composers
Category:Italian classical composers
Category:Italian classical pianists
Category:Italian women classical composers
Category:Italian women classical pianists
Category:Year of death missing