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1 Biography  





2 External links  














Uberto Zanolli: Difference between revisions






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[[Category:Mexican conductors]]

[[Category:Mexican conductors]]

[[Category:People from Mexico City]]

[[Category:People from Mexico City]]

[[Category:Italian immigrants to Mexico]]


Revision as of 21:27, 20 April 2009

Uberto Zanolli (1917 – 1994) was an Italo-Mexican composer, conductor and writer. He was an engineer official for the Italian army during World War II and a prisoner for two years in Nazi concentration camps.

Biography

Uberto Zanolli, in his childhood, studied violin, viola, piano and composition in the ConservatoriesofVerona, Bolzano, and Milan. At the age of 17, he made his professional debut as an orchestra director. After the war, Zanolli returned to artistic activities, working in some of the most important theatres in Italy, Switzerland, France, Portugal, Spain and the United States.

The son of Amelia Pìa Balugani Vecchi and Luigi Zanolli Marcolini, in 1944 his first son, Fausto, was born from his marriage with Elsa Angelini, from whom he was widowed shortly after. From 1953, Zanolli lived in Mexico and in 1959 he married the Mexican soprano Betty Fabila, becoming the father of the pianist Betty Luisa Zanolli Fabila. He was the docent of the Concervatorio Nacional de Musica (1958 - 1960); permanent orchestra director of the Academia de la Opera (1953 - 1960); title holder of the Coro de Bellas Artes (1959-1960) and the Orquesta del Teatro de Bellas Artes (1975).

Anaturalized Mexican since 1957, Zanolli dedicated himself to magistery in diverse institutions. He was a professor in the Science faculty and, from 1957 until his death, he was a catedratic of the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria, becoming the founder of the corrs La Viga and a General of the ENP (1967). From 1972 to 1987, he was the director of the Department of Music, and from 1987 to 1994, the General Coordinator of Stetic activities of that institution.

Uberto Zanolli was the founder and director of the Orquesta de Cámara de la ENP-UNAM (1972 - 1994). Within the labor of the cultural diffusion that he created with the OCENP, he made the Didactic Concerts the principal mission. He presented an endless series of performances of composers from diverse times and nationalities, contributing especially to the divulgation of the contemporary Mexican composers.

His name is connected to the discovery of an eighteenth century composer, Giacomo Facco.

The President of Italy, Antonio Segni, gave Zanolli the title of the Man of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (1962), and in Mexico, the Unión de Cronistas de Música y Teatro named him Musician of the Year (1963).

He was a member of the Liga de Compositores Mexicanos de Música de Concierto, and recorded dozens of albums and media in the choral, symphonic and chamber genres with the companies CBS, Musart and Mexico's Voz Viva (UNAM). Because of his important aportation in the play El Arte de la Fuga (The Art of the Fuga), by Johann Sebastian Bach, of which he contributed in the transcription, interpretation, and instrumentation for the chamber orchestra, the Dirección General of the ENP granted him the Medalla de Oro al Mérito Académico (1975). He was also given the Águila de Tlatelolco de la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores and, in 1986, the Sindicato Unico de Trabajadores de la Música (CTM) granted him the Lira de Oro; the year in which the Escuela Nacional de Música (UNAM) gave him the Cátedra Extraordinaria Manuel M. Ponce.

He imparted televised courses and radio programs in which they show the cultural programs that he released for the Instituto Politécnico Nacional in collaboration with his wife, Betty Fabila (1960 - 1962), like hundreds of radio broadcasts through XEN 690, a radio station for which he funded and lead the magazine Sele Música for many years. A Music critic since the age of 17, he collaborated in newspapers like Il Gazzetino di Venezia, L'Arena di Verona, Diario de la Nación, Zócalo and El Universal. He participated in seminaries of academic actualization, and offered countless conferences and ponencies within the universitary mark.

External links


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Uberto_Zanolli&oldid=285100647"

Categories: 
1917 births
1994 deaths
Mexicans of Italian descent
Italian composers
Italian conductors
Mexican composers of classical music
Mexican conductors
People from Mexico City
Italian immigrants to Mexico
 



This page was last edited on 20 April 2009, at 21:27 (UTC).

This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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