Henry Mollicone

Henry Mollicone (born 1946) is an American composer and musical instructor. He currently resides in Saratoga, California.

“…One of the most distinctive American opera composers.” –The Washington Post, January 1998

Career

Mollicone is known for his one-act operas, including Emperor Norton, Starbird, and The Mask of Evil. One of his most popular works is the one-act chamber opera The Face on the Barroom Floor. Originally commissioned in 1978 for the Central City Opera of Central City, Colorado, The Face on the Barroom Floor was inspired by the painting of the same title on the floor of the Teller House Bar in Central City.[1] Mollicone has also written three full-length operas: Coyote Tales, Hotel Eden, and Gabriel's Daughter. He has written works for both television and film including The Premonition (1976). In addition, he has written pieces for voice, ballet, chorus and other various chamber combinations.

Other works

As a former faculty member of the Santa Clara University Department of Music, Henry Mollicone also acts as an instructor, adjudicator and collaborator. His greatest musical influences have been Puccini, Verdi, Britten, Bernstein.

gollark: At least Lua doesn't have the !!FUN!! C(++) memory management stuff going on.
gollark: Gotos are *more* prone to that than some other things.
gollark: Well, gotos often just lead to convoluted messy control flow.
gollark: Well, goto bad.
gollark: No. Destroy skeumorphism. ALL MUST BE FLAT.

References

  1. Dalheim, Eric L. (c. 1983). "Henry Mollicone. The Face on the Barroom Floor. (record review)". American Music. University of Illinois Press. 1: 110–111. doi:10.2307/3051810. JSTOR 3051810.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.