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Biography
Luca Lombardi, Italian composer, born December 24, 1945 in Rome.
He studied piano and composition in Rome, Florence, Vienna,
Cologne and Berlin, among others with Karlheinz Stockhausen,
Bernd-Alois Zimmermann and Paul Dessau. He earned a PhD in
German Language and Literature at Rome University. From 1973 to
1993 he taught composition at the Conservatories of Pesaro and
Milan.
He wrote more than 160 compositions, including four operas (Faust. Un travestimento, 1991; Dmitri oder der Künstler und die Macht, 2000; Prospero, 2006; Il Re nudo, 2009), music for orchestra (among which Terra, 2007), chamber music (among which Warum? Secondo quartetto per archi, 2006) and for solo instruments (among which Nel vento, con Ariel for flute, 2004). He is a member of the Academy of Arts, Berlin. He is co-author of a treatise on orchestration (Instrumentation in der Musik des XX. Jahrhunderts, Celle, Germany, 1985). A selection of his writings was published in the book Construction of Freedom and other Writings (in German and English), edited by Juergen Thym (Baden-Baden, 2006). Over the years he reached a more and more accomplished synthesis of his different musical experiences, with a particular reference to the music of the great tradition: from Beethoven to Stravinskij, Bartók and Shostakovich and, as for the opera, to Rossini, Verdi and Puccini - however never from a nostalgic and retrospective position, but from an absolutely contemporary one. At the end of 2008 he acquired the Israeli citizenship and lives since then both in Marino (Rome) and in Tel Aviv. (G.B.)
Portrait (Gabriele Becheri, 2009)
Of few composers can it be said that their creative life mirrors the evolution of such a complex and articulated period as the 20th century, with its confusion of diverse styles and techniques in all the arts, including music. Luca Lombardi (Rome, 1945) is one of those few, his musical language being strongly characteristic of and entirely immersed in our contemporary culture.
Gabriele Becheri
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Portrait (Michael Kurtz, 2006)
Luca Lombardi (born in Rome in 1945) must be considered an important and prominent representative of Italian music of his generation. During the past forty years his creativity has been shaped by a continual process of searching, questioning and renewal. By addressing the social and political issues of his time, his oeuvre is pervaded by a kind of humanism that makes him a worthy successor to his colleagues Dallapiccola and Nono. His works (150 thus far) show mastery in handling diverse stylistic elements, whereby the musical language results largely from the tasks and the themes confronted by the composer; it ranges from expressive cantilenas, violent outbursts, meditative contemplation to alienation and deconstruction, and constantly there are flashes of wit and irony.
Lombardi attended the German gymnasium in Rome and, since the mid-1960s, has been a wanderer and mediator between German and Italian culture. His composition teachers included Armando Renzi and Roberto Lupi in Rome and Florence, Karl Schiske in Vienna, as well as Bernd Alois Zimmermann and Vinko Globokar in Cologne. He participated in Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Cologne Courses for New Music, studied electronic music in Cologne and Utrecht, and later became master student of Paul Dessau in Berlin. In 1975 he earned his doctorate with a dissertation about the music of Hanns Eisler. Since 1973 he taught composition: until 1978 at the Conservatory in Pesaro, then until 1993 at the Conservatory in Milan. Lombardi is the author of numerous essays and several books on musical and philosophical issues; he has been invited to lecture and teach courses in Europe, Japan, as well as North and South America. As fellow and artist in residence at various Advanced Studies Institutes (Berlin Wissenschaftskolleg, Künstlerhof Schreyan, Hanse Wissenschaftskolleg Delmenhorst) he spent extensive time living in Germany. He received numerous awards and recognitions, including the Italian Goffredo Petrassi Price in 2006.
Lombardi’s compositions have been published by Moeck, Suvini Zerboni, Ricordi and RAI Trade and include three opera (Faust, un travestimento—libretto: E. Sanguineti after Goethe’s Faust I, Dmitri oder der Künstler und die Macht—libretto: H.-K. Jungheinrich, and Prospero—libretto F. C. Delius and L. Lombardi after Shakespeare’s Tempest), three symphonies, numerous oratorios and orchestral works, as well as chamber music in cycles (Sisyphus) and varied ensembles. Among his compositions are many vocal works. Most of his compositions were commissioned by music festivals, radio stations, opera houses, including IRCAM (Paris), West German Radio Cologne, Saarländischer Rundfunk, Radio DDR (Berlin), RAI Rome, Radio della Svizzera Italiana Lugano, Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin, Musikbiennale Berlin, Kölnmusik, Frankfurter Feste, Wiener Festwochen, Rikskonserter Stockholm, Opernhaus Basel, Oper Leipzig, Staatstheater Nürnberg.
Luca Lombardi lives near Rome overlooking Lake Albano.
Michael Kurtz
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