0
Alberto Ginastera
Alberto Ginastera
Argentine composer
1
Lera Auerbach
Lera Auerbach
Soviet-Russian-born American classical composer and pianist
2
Nicolas Flagello
Nicolas Flagello
American composer
3
Richard Mills
Richard Mills
Australian conductor and composer
4
Camargo Guarnieri
Camargo Guarnieri
Brazilian composer
5
Georg Friedrich Haas
Georg Friedrich Haas
Austrian composer
6
Osvaldas Balakauskas
Osvaldas Balakauskas
Lithuanian composer and diplomat
7
William Alwyn
William Alwyn
English composer, conductor, and music teacher
8
Eduard Tubin
Eduard Tubin
Estonian composer and conductor
9
Dmitri Smirnov
Dmitri Smirnov
Russian composer
10
Robert Kurka
Robert Kurka
American musician and composer
11
Luis de Pablo
Luis de Pablo
Spanish composer
12
Alberto Williams
Alberto Williams
Argentine composer
13
Ikuma Dan
Ikuma Dan
Japanese composer, essayist (1924-2001)
14
Rodion Shchedrin
Rodion Shchedrin
Russian composer
Gilardo Gilardi
Argentine composer

Gilardo Gilardi

Intro
Argentine composer
Genres

Gilardo Gilardi (May 25, 1889 - January 16, 1963) was an Argentine composer, pianist, and conductor who was the eponym of the Gilardo Gilardi Conservatory of Music in La Plata, Buenos Aires.

He was born in San Fernando, Argentina and first learned music from his father before studying with the composer Arturo Berutti in Buenos Aires. He began composing as a teenager and he premiered his first opera, Ilse, at Teatro Colón opera house, aged 23. He co-founded the group Renovación (Renovation) in 1929, but left three years later, in 1932. He was professor at the University of La Plata and wrote an elementary course on harmony. Gilardi experimented with the pentatonic scale and Americas' Indigenous music. Some of their works are the operas Ilse (1923) and La leyenda del Urutaú (The legend of the Urutaú) (1935), Primera serie argentina, (First Argentine series), Evocación quechua, Gaucho con botas nuevas (Gaucho with new boots) (1938, orchestra), a symphonic poem which won a national prize in 1939. Among his religious music Réquiem (1933) and Misa de Gloria (Glory Mass) (1936) are particularly esteemed. He also composed chamber music pieces: Sonata for violin and piano, Songs for voice and piano, Argentine popular Sonata for violin and piano and various piano pieces.

Gilardi's pupils included Susana Baron Supervielle and Regina Benavente.