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First name: Felice de
Last name: Giardini
Dates: 1716-1796
Category: Quartet
Nationality: Italian
Opus name: Quartetto in si bemolle maggiore Opus 21 no. 1, 2, 3, per clavicembalo, violine, viola e violoncello (1778-1779)
Publisher:
Peculiarities: http://ks.imslp.info/files/imglnks/usimg/0/04/IMSLP213988-SIBLEY1802.14979.a011-39087009062037.piano.pdf
Information: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Felice Giardini (April 12, 1716 - June 8, 1796) was an Italian composer and violinist. Felice Giardini (1716-1796) was born in Turin. When it became clear that he was a child prodigy, his father sent him to Milan. There he studied singing, harpsichord and violin but it was on the latter that he became a famous virtuoso. By the age of 12, he was already playing in theater orchestras. In a famous incident about this time, Giardini, who was serving as assistant concertmaster during an opera, played a solo passage for violin, the composer Niccoli Jommelli had written. He decided to show off his skills and improvised several bravura variations which Jomelli had not written. Although the audience applauded loudly, Jomelli, who happened to be there, was not pleased and suddenly stood up and slapped the young man in the face. Giardini, years later, remarked, "it was the most instructive lesson I ever received from a great artist." During the 1750s, Giardini toured Europe as a violinist, scoring successes in Paris, Berlin, and especially in England where he eventually settled. For many years, he served as the concertmaster and director of the Italian Opera in London and gave solo concerts under the auspices of J. C. Bach with whom he was a close friend. He directed the orchestra at the Pantheon C=concerts.He was widely regarded as the greatest musical performing artist before the public. (1755-1770). In 1784, he returned to Naples to run a theater, however, there he encountered financial setbacks. In 1793, he returned to England to try his luck. But times had changed and he was no longer remembered. He then went to Russia, but again had little luck, dying in Moscow in 1796.