Roberto Lupi | |
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Portrait of Lupi by Adele Steiner, 1934
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Born |
Milan, Italy |
28 November 1908
Died | 17 April 1971 Dornach, Switzerland |
(aged 62)
Occupation |
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Roberto Lupi (28 November 1908 – 17 April 1971) was an Italian composer, conductor, and music theorist. Born in Milan and trained at the conservatory there, he began his conducting career in 1937. His compositions of experimental music included large-scale works for chorus and orchestra, chamber music, and stage works. However, Lupi's most widely heard piece was his Armonie del pianeta Saturno for oboe, harp and orchestra which was played each night from 1954 to 1985 at the close of RAI television transmissions. He held the chair in composition at the Florence Conservatory from 1941 until his death and published three books on music theory, the last of them posthumously. From the 1950s his theoretical approach and his compositions, especially his stage works, were strongly influenced by the ideas of Rudolf Steiner.
Lupi was born in Milan to Maria née Torelli and Ermanno Lupi. His father was a school teacher and talented amateur violinist from Guastalla. His grandfather had been a professional violinist who died on a concert tour of South America in 1895. While his father was away in World War I, the family moved to back to Guastalla where Lupi began his music studies at the age of 8. When the war ended the family returned to Milan and he continued his studies at the Milan Conservatory. He received diplomas in piano (1927) and cello (1928) before he began his study of composition under Arrigo Pedrollo, graduating from the conservatory in 1934. In 1937 he won the first Rassegna Nazionale, a competition for young conductors, and after period of further study at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia with Bernardino Molinari, began an active career as a conductor.