It’s generally reckoned that the British are 
          unrivalled in their capacity to neglect their native composers. Yet 
          the Italians, loud in their praises of half-a-dozen of their 19
th 
          century opera composers and two or three baroque ones, neglect the rest 
          with a thoroughness that would make even a British concert promoter 
          blush. In some ways neglected Italian composers are worse off than British 
          ones. A composer’s perceived political leanings in the mid-20
th 
          century often led to his banishment by the Italian post-war musical 
          establishment. This at least didn’t happen in the UK, or only 
          marginally. Furthermore, while the societies, trusts and sites dedicated 
          to such figures as Gurney, Armstrong Gibbs or Dunhill may lack the financial 
          clout to do more than a tithe of what they would wish, they at least 
          exist and ensure a minimum of information and discussion on their chosen 
          subjects. Vincenzo Ferroni, Aldo Finzi and Leone Sinigaglia are the 
          sort of figures who would surely have societies dedicated to them if 
          they were British. In Italy the best they can hope for is a website 
          put up at somebody’s individual initiative. Nor is there an Italian 
          Music Society that might, like the British Music Society, take up the 
          cudgels for composers without pressure groups of their own. In days 
          gone by the RAI did much to keep alive the lesser names. The best that 
          can be hoped today from this source is an occasional repeat of archival 
          broadcasts. 
            
          In 1938 Sir Henry Wood could still say (
My Life of Music,
p.271) 
          that “Sinigaglia’s orchestral works have always been well 
          thought of in England for their delicacy and for their Piedmontese atmosphere”. 
          But Wood’s British premières of Sinigaglia go back to 1909 
          and 1912 and I wonder if anything by Sinigaglia has been heard in a 
          UK concert hall within living memory. Things in Italy aren’t much 
          better. While Mario Rossi was still at the head of the Turin RAI SO 
          an occasional tribute to Sinigaglia was managed, but that is going back 
          to the 1950s and 1960s. When Cesare Gallino, RAI’s “house 
          conductor” of operetta in the post-war years, came out of retirement 
          to conduct his 90
th birthday concert in 1994, his programme 
          included Sinigaglia’s 
Piedmontese Dance no.2, a reminder 
          that it had been a pop orchestral number in his earlier days. More recently, 
          music by Sinigaglia is sometimes chosen for performance on Remembrance 
          Day for victims of the holocaust. As for recordings, a few Toscanini 
          broadcasts come and go, as do certain chamber works. I am pleased to 
          have made my own contribution, recording the 
3 Canti op.37 with 
          mezzo-soprano Elisabetta Paglia as part of a CD entitled “
Passé 
          - Romantic Song in Italy” (
Sheva 
          SH 050). Here then, in Italian, is the first book to be dedicated 
          to Jewish-Italian Leone Sinigaglia (1868-1944), native of Turin, pupil 
          of Dvořák, composer whose works were performed by Nikisch, 
          Mahler, Toscanini, Mengelberg, Furtwängler, Barbirolli and Kreisler, 
          collector of Piedmontese folk-tunes, mountaineer and, finally, victim 
          of Mussolini’s race laws. 
            
          Written by a lawyer with a passion for music (La Villa), plus a chapter 
          on Sinigaglia the composer by a musicologist (Lo Piccolo), the book 
          plunges in at the end of the story with a dramatic account of Jewish 
          persecution under the Fascists. Anyone who still subscribes to the comforting 
          view that Mussolini’s race laws were a fairly benign lip-service 
          intended, 
all’italiana, to keep his bullying German partner 
          happy while not actually doing very much, can think again. Fully referenced 
          with detailed footnotes, it makes chilling reading. Doubts on the philological 
          validity of the book arise, though, when Sinigaglia himself is introduced 
          into the story. 
            
          
Towards 6 on a hot, muggy evening, two men were slipping beside the 
          walls of the Turin buildings. The young man, in a threadbare jacket, 
          was carrying a small suitcase, while his other hand supported an elderly 
          gentleman. The young man peered around cautiously. The old man was aristocratically 
          dressed, but seemed bent and faltering. His eyes were tired and his 
          beard white. Sirens were sounding while shouts from soldiers and gunfire 
          could be heard in the distance. But their goal, their salvation, was 
          nearby: the Ospedale Mauriziano Umberto I
, where the young man 
          had, with some difficulty, persuaded the older man to take refuge. They 
          entered a large hall and, after briefly reporting to reception, proceeded 
          upstairs to a room already prepared. The old man sat down, gasping. 
          They embraced and said goodbye: “Ciao Luigi”. (p.13, 
          my translation). 
            
          Nice writing but, as the Italians call it, “
biografia romanzata”: 
          fictionalized biography. In truth, the young man is identified in a 
          footnote as Luigi Rognoni (1913-1986), a major Italian musicologist. 
          If the above account is based on a specific memoir by Rognoni, this 
          is not stated, leaving us to presume it is an imaginative reconstruction 
          by the author. 
            
          Before we get too het up about this, was there any alternative? How 
          much hard information survives about Sinigaglia? La Villa tells us that, 
          as part of his preparation for this book, he applied to “the library 
          of a celebrated [Italian] musical institute” which was known to 
          hold material on Sinigaglia, requesting to have sight of these papers. 
          “The director hummed and hawed and in the end I wasn’t allowed 
          to see anything”. I don’t understand La Villa’s nicety 
          in not naming the institute and its director, who surely deserves to 
          be exposed and, if possible, horsewhipped. There it is. If in the end 
          this book doesn’t offer much in concrete facts that you won’t 
          already find in Wikipedia, it may be that further facts have vanished 
          or are impossible to access. What the authors can do - and they do it 
          very well - is paint the backdrop against which Sinigaglia’s career 
          took place. 
            
          The next chapter goes back to the beginning of the story. True to form, 
          it dedicates 13 pages to the cultural life of Turin and 5 to how the 
          young Sinigaglia fitted into this cultural life. It is nevertheless 
          a fascinating tale. The post-WWII world knows Turin as the city of FIAT, 
          an industrial, workers’ town milling somewhat incongruously around 
          the grandiose former royal palaces of the Savoy capital. Even by the 
          time of Sinigaglia’s birth, Turin’s royal status was a thing 
          of the past yet, as La Villa shows, it was still a thriving cultural 
          centre. It was also, thanks to the dominance of the young Toscanini, 
          one of the few places in Italy where concertgoers could hear not only 
          Italian opera but Wagner’s music dramas and a range of recent 
          symphonic works. La Villa even tells us (p.30) that Toscanini conducted 
          works by Cowen and Stanford. Neither of the latter’s two recent 
          biographers, Dibble and Rodmell, mention this. However, Toscanini biographer 
          Harvey Sachs has kindly confirmed that Toscanini conducted a performance 
          of Stanford’s 
Irish Symphony in Turin on 6 October 1898 
          and the two middle movements of Cowen’s 
Scandinavian Symphony 
          on 12 December 1897 and 8 September 1898. There is no evidence that 
          he gave further performances of either composer. 
            
          The stars in the Turin firmament - scientific and literary as well as 
          musical - are therefore well described. Turning to Sinigaglia himself, 
          La Villa is unable to do much more than list those whom Sinigaglia is 
          known to have frequented, but this is probably not his fault. We learn 
          that Sinigaglia began travelling in the early 1890s, taking in such 
          musical centres as Munich, Bayreuth, Prague, Leipzig and Berlin. He 
          thus planted the roots for a style that seems as much middle-European 
          as Italian. 
            
          The next chapter deals with Sinigaglia the mountaineer. By Sinigaglia’s 
          day the Alps had been pretty well conquered but the Dolomites, less 
          high, had been somewhat scorned by professionals as second-class mountains. 
          They therefore offered several virgin peaks, as well as alternative 
          routes up some of the known ones. Sinigaglia set about climbing these 
          and is considered a major figure in the conquest of the Dolomites. His 
          own account was published in English, soon after the first Italian edition, 
          as “
Climbing reminiscences of the Dolomites. With introduction 
          by Edmund J. Garwood. Tr. by Mary Alice Vialls. London: T.F. Unwin, 
          1896”. A modern reprint appears to be available. Having more material 
          to work on, La Villa opts for the slightly inconvenient solution of 
          a basic narration in the text, with many smallish quotations from Sinigaglia’s 
          own writings, augmented by numerous footnotes, often occupying more 
          than two-thirds of the page, giving further material from the composer’s 
          reminiscences. The result is that, whether you want to read all the 
          footnote material or not, your eyes will be continually darting up and 
          down the page. Perhaps I am being selfish. As a musician, my interest 
          in Sinigaglia as a mountaineer does not require much knowledge beyond 
          the fact that he did it. It is clear, though, that he was at least as 
          important a mountaineer as he was a composer, and it is right that this 
          book should cater for mountaineer-readers as well as musician-readers. 
          
            
          The following chapter, “The Viennese 
Belle Époque”, 
          takes up the musical story. These are probably the most interesting 
          and eventful years, when Sinigaglia once again travelled Europe, meeting 
          Mahler, Goldmark, Leschetitzky and Brahms. He studied for a time with 
          Mandyczewski and, most significantly, in 1901, with Dvořák. 
          It was from the latter that he was inspired to incorporate Piedmontese 
          melodies and turns of phrase in his compositions, modelling himself 
          on what Dvořák himself had done with his native Czech themes. 
          Sinigaglia dedicated his 
Piedmontese Rhapsody for violin and 
          orchestra (1904) to Dvořák. Notable interpreters of this 
          piece included Kreisler, Jan Kubelik, Kocian and Stefi Geyer. The folk-inspired 
          
Piedmontese Dances provoked loud opposition from the audience 
          when Toscanini premiered them in Turin in 1905. Many critics, too, accused 
          Sinigaglia of “introducing tavern songs into the concert hall”. 
          This was true, but it seems strange today that this should have been 
          considered a shameful thing to do. Even Toscanini expressed misgivings 
          in a letter quoted here, though publicly he stood by Sinigaglia.  
          
            
          The last chapter covers the longest period, from Sinigaglia’s 
          return to Italy at the end of 1901 to his tragic death, but it is the 
          least eventful. Never a notably prolific composer, his production gradually 
          slackened, concluding in 1936 with his violin sonata. It seems that 
          gradually his interests turned towards ethnomusicology. He roamed Piedmont, 
          taking down folk melodies and amassing a considerable collection that 
          was not published in its entirety till long after his death. These “philological” 
          settings had a simple, basic piano accompaniment and are not to be confused 
          with the 
Old Piedmontese Popular Songs which, with their fairly 
          elaborate orchestral accompaniments, were once performed quite regularly 
          in Italy. 
            
          So the book returns to its starting point. The refuge Sinigaglia sought 
          in the hospital was short-lived. Despite his age he was rounded up and 
          only a fortuitous, and fatal, heart-attack saved him from the train 
          to Auschwitz. 
            
          As I stated at the beginning, the last chapter is a discussion of Sinigaglia’s 
          music by Annalisa Lo Piccolo. This adopts a descriptive tone rather 
          than a strictly analytical one: 
            
          
The opening of the Adagio [of the Violin Concerto]
is entrusted 
          to a warm pastoral melody on the horns, repeated by the oboes and clarinets 
          while the strings remain silent. The soloist takes up the opening motive, 
          extended and prolonged by numerous syncopations, which seem to transcend 
          the steady rhythmic pulsation of the orchestra [p.91, my translation]. 
          
            
          The problem with this sort of writing is that it doesn’t play 
          the music for us, and if somebody did play the music for us we wouldn’t 
          need it. On the other hand, the time is hardly ripe for the sort of 
          examination of Sinigaglia’s harmonic and formal procedures that 
          I would have preferred. If this essay inspires someone to seek out the 
          music and play it then all well and good. 
            
          A slim volume, then, but probably all that could be done at present. 
          I have a couple of queries, though. 
            
          Firstly, more than half - at a rough estimate - of the 100-or-so pages 
          are taken up with footnotes. Where these quote sources of information, 
          or direct the reader to more detailed sources, I have no quarrel, indeed 
          I would expect this. My eyebrows were raised as early as p.18 when a 
          footnote of 18 lines provided a potted biography of Nietzsche. Surely 
          the reader who does not know who Nietzsche was can look him up easily 
          enough? It is certainly useful to have information on such figures as 
          Angelo Serato (12 lines) and Rosario Scalero (all of 50 lines). That 
          said, is it likely that anyone ignorant of Bruckner (8 lines), Catalani 
          (6), Puccini (18), Boito (10), Mahler (25), Dvořák (17), 
          Bartók (11) and Kodály (9) would be reading about Sinigaglia 
          at all? The footnotes are strangely selective, too. Dvořák 
          and Puccini apparently need explaining; Grieg and Mascagni, it seems, 
          do not. It will be a pleasure to admirers of Svendsen, Reinecke, Rheinberger, 
          Cowen and Stanford to note that, for La Villa and Lo Piccolo, these 
          composers are sufficiently celebrated to need no presentation. Were 
          it not for the suspicion that the authors are so little aware of them 
          as to think they do not matter. Yet, without disrespect to anyone, the 
          five composers just mentioned surely contributed at least as much to 
          musical literature and history as Sinigaglia himself. 
            
          Perhaps this is just carping. I’m complaining about things that 
          are redundant rather than things that are missing. As to what is missing, 
          it would have been useful to have a work list. There again, maybe the 
          information just isn’t available. Somebody on the internet has 
          tried to compile a work list but, although Sinigaglia’s opus numbers 
          only extend to 44, he has drawn a blank with quite a number of them. 
          Presumably unpublished, maybe lost. 
            
          So, in spite of a few gripes, this book is more than good enough to 
          start the Sinigaglia ball rolling, provided you can read Italian. Whether 
          a detailed, full length study will follow no doubt depends on a revised 
          perception of Sinigaglia’s worth. So what of the music? 
            
          Of the one work where I have hands-on knowledge, the 
3 Canti op.37, 
          I must say I was impressed. The harmonic language is closer to Mahler 
          than to Dvořák and the opening setting of D’Annunzio’s 
          
Canto dell’Ospite penetrates that poet’s mystical-sensual 
          world as well as any other D’Annunzio setting known to me. The 
          other two songs are evocative, poetic and far from predictable in their 
          musical progress. 
            
          Finally, I listened to some off-the-air tapes, all recorded in Turin 
          in the 1960s under Mario Rossi. The Overture “
Le baruffe chiozzotte”, 
          inspired by a Goldoni comedy, was the piece that grabbed the ears of 
          so many conductors. It’s an effervescent, bustling affair with 
          a more songful, lyrical second subject. It has something of the opulence 
          of the Viennese “Belle Époque”; Rezniček’s 
          
Donna Diana overture came into my mind as a possible comparison. 
          While you could hardly fail to enjoy it, it can hardly be said to inhabit 
          a sound-world of its own, or to haunt the memory. 
            
          There seems more individuality in the 
Old Piedmontese Popular Songs, 
          8 of which were sung at the concert I have on tape. The orchestral colouring 
          is unfailingly piquant and imaginative. The orchestral introduction 
          to “
Il cacciatore del bosco” will be balm to Dvořák-lovers’ 
          ears, as will be much else. These arrangements do not have the over-the-top 
          lushness of Canteloube’s “
Songs of the Auvergne”, 
          yet a singer about to record an umpteenth version of these latter might 
          just take pause for thought and have a look at Sinigaglia’s Piedmontese 
          songs. She could even find cult material on her hands. Rosina Cavicchioli 
          sang them beautifully, though some of her more impulsive characterization 
          found Rossi lagging behind. 
            
          The largest-scale work available to me was the Violin Concerto. It sounds 
          a treat to play in its alternation of fireworks with luscious melodic 
          phrases. If there’s a suspicion that the outer movements are doing, 
          very expertly, all the things a romantic violin concerto is expected 
          to do, the central slow movement touches a deeper chord. Indeed, the 
          return of the beautiful main theme in the violin’s lower register 
          with a counter-melody on the flute entwining high above must be among 
          the most bewitching moments in romantic violin literature. For this 
          movement above all, Sinigaglia’s Violin Concerto deserves far 
          wider currency. Rossi and his soloist, Giovanni Guglielmo, are responsive 
          throughout, but seem truly inspired by the slow movement. If only for 
          this, and some of Cavicchioli’s singing, these Rossi performances 
          would deserve historical issue even if modern recordings were to be 
          made, which I hope they will. 
            
          
Christopher Howell