* En anglais uniquement
The name of Italian composer
Franco Alfano is best known from his having put in order
Giacomo Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot. Within his native Italy,
Alfano is likewise revered for his opera Risurrezione (1904), which had already achieved a thousand performances in Italian opera houses by the time
Alfano died at the age of 79 in 1954. Yet even in Italy,
Alfano's true historical place in Italian music is little recognized. If one were to regard the first generation of Italian modernists as consisting of five composers headed off by
Respighi, Malipiero, Pizzetti, and Casella, then rightfully
Alfano would be the fifth name on that list.
Alfano studied primarily in Italy, but in 1895 traveled to Leipzig to take lessons with renowned pedagogue Salomon Jadassohn.
Alfano initially pursued a career as a concert pianist, an endeavor that found culmination in the premiere of his now-lost piano concerto (1900); thereafter
Alfano devoted himself to composition, although he worked to some degree as an accompanist to singers of art songs, particularly in his own.
Alfano's life changed significantly with the enormous success of his third opera, Risurrezione (1904), which is based on Tolstoy and composed in the verismo style then in vogue in Italy.
Alfano's contact with the music of
Debussy shortly afterward caused a dramatic change of heart stylistically, and from its influence
Alfano forged his mature identity. Throughout his life,
Alfano composed about 15 operas, of which the most important outside of Risurrezione are L'Ombra di Don Giovanni (1914), La leggenda di Sakùntala (1921), and Cyrano de Bergerac (1936). By the time of his last-named work,
Alfano's orientalist, post-Impressionist manner had given way to a more neo-Classical approach. Unlike other composers associated with verismo,
Alfano was quite productive in the field of instrumental music. Although many of these works are lost, his chamber music is of outstanding quality, particularly his Sonata for cello and piano (1925) and the Sonata for violin and piano (1933);
Alfano also produced a significant cycle of three string quartets (1918, 1926, and 1945). While it is a mistake to regard
Alfano as a holdover from the late nineteenth century Italian tradition, it appears that this is the fate posterity has arranged for him, and several of his major works are impossible to account for. Only time will tell if posterity catches up with
Alfano's most meaningful achievements in the field of early Italian modernism.