- Fernando Previtali, Antonio Cassinelli, Orchestra Sinfonica Di Roma Della RAI, Paolo Silveri, Gabriella Gatti, Mario Binci, Caterina Mancini
- Renata Mattioli, Fernando Previtali, Plinio Clabassi, Lucille Udovich, Orchestra Sinfonica della Rai, Franco Corelli, Coro de Milano della RAI
- Aldo Protti, Guerrino Boschetti, Gré Brouwenstijn, Chorus of Teatro Colon, Richard Tucker, Mario Verazzi, Mignon Dunn, Fernando Previtali, Virgilio Tavini, Giulio Viamonte, Ruzena Horakova, Norman Scott, Victorio Bacciato, Orchestra of the Teatro Cólon
- Marcello Giorda, Virgilio Gottardi, Tito Gobbi, Roberto Bruni, Anna Maria Rovere, Lina Pagliughi, Mario Filippeschi, Tullio Serafin, Giulio Neri, Giuseppe Varni, Orchestra of the Rome Opera House
- Philharmonia Orchestra, Fernando Previtali, Coro Dell'Opera Di Roma, Anna Moffo, Robert Merrill, Collin Davis, Liliana Poli, Orchestra dell'opera di Roma, Richard Tucker
- Renata Mattioli, Coro di Milano della RAI, Fernando Previtali, Giulio Bertola, Mirto Picchi, Luisella Ciaffi, Magda Lászlò, Orchestra Sinfonica Nazionale della RAI di Milano
- Nestore Catalani, Coro Della Rai Di Roma, Fernando Previtali, Orchestra Sinfonica della RAI di Roma, Aldo Bertocci
- Fernando Previtali, Coro di Roma della RAI, Gaetano Riccitelli, Gino Penno, Orchestra Sinfonica Di Roma Della RAI
Fernando Previtali
Biography
Though he was a composer of some distinction, Fernando Previtali is best remembered as a brilliant conductor of the classic Italian operas, especially those of Verdi, and for his advocacy of contemporary orchestral music, particularly of works by Busoni, Ghedini, and Dallapiccola. But Previtali's tastes extended into the realm of mainstream instrumental music as well, taking in a vast range of works by Mozart, Schumann, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, and many others. His own musical compositions are virtually forgotten today, though some had attracted attention in their day, including the 1945 ballet Allucinazioni. Though Previtali has been dead for more than two decades, many of his recordings are still widely available on a range of labels, including RCA, Gala, Opera d'Oro, Fonit, and Urania. Previtali was born in Adria, Italy, on February 16, 1907. At the Turin Conservatory he studied organ, cello (under Pietro Grossi) and composition (under Franco Alfano). He launched his career as a cellist, playing in the Turin-based Teatro Regio Orchestra. In 1928 he relocated to Florence where he worked with conductor Vittorio Gui and became instrumental in the founding of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra. He was appointed deputy conductor of that ensemble and served in that capacity until 1936, the year he became resident conductor of the Rome Radio Symphony Orchestra. But for a year-long hiatus in 1944, he held the post at the RRSO until 1953. During his Rome years, Previtali premiered several important operas, including the 1939 Re Hassan by Ghedini and Dallapiccola's one-act masterpiece Volo di notte, from 1940. Previtali accepted the appointment as conductor at the Academy of Santa Cecilia in 1953 and held the post seven years. During his tenure there, he made many successful European and American tours with the ensemble. From 1960-1967 he was principal conductor of the Buenos Aires Teatro Colon Orchestra. Previtali served as principal conductor at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples starting in 1972. Throughout much of his career he held master classes in conducting, particularly at the Academy of Santa Cecilia and at La Scala. Most of his available recordings were made in the latter half of his career and include Verdi's Luisa Miller (with Carreras and Ricciarelli) on Opera d'Oro, Verdi's Il Trovatore (from 1957, with del Monaco and Gencer) on a Hardy Classics DVD, and the Mozart Piano Concertos No. 17 and No. 23, with Robert Casadesus on Archipel.