Word: adriano
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...audience to the curious delights of a long and varied line-up of forgotten composers, such as the polyphonic wizardry of Ludwig Senfl, composer to the court of Maximilian I, the mystical motets of Martin de Rivaflecha, chapelmas-ter at the Cathedral of Valencia, and the Rabelaisian merriment of Adriano Banchieri, abbot of an Olivetan monastery. Its most ambitious undertaking was The Play of Daniel, a 12th century music-drama that was unearthed in the British Museum. Elegantly staged in medieval setting and dress in a Manhattan church, Daniel was a solid off-Broadway hit of the 1959 season...
Given a table, tuning fork, piles of music and the Sestetto Italiano Luca Marenzio one has a delightful evening of Italian madrigals from the late sixteenth century. Add Sanders Theatre and last night's smallish but enthusiastic audience, and Adriano Banchieri's madrigal comedy La Barca di Venezia per Podova becomes the absurd and absorbing musical work it has been for three and a half centuries...
...coronation scene nevertheless emerged triumphantly Russian--strong, coherent and assured. But this is not to disparage the Glee Club's numerous achievements during the rest of the program. Three Mozart choruses, themselves rather uninteresting, three songs of students and street cries by the early 17th century Italian composer, Adriano Banchiere--all these were handled with skill, ease and assurance...
...fall from Italy's progress-minded Olivetti company, biggest European maker of typewriters and calculating machines; it purchased 34% of Underwood's stock for $8,700,000. When Underwood's President Frank Beane made the deal, he expected to keep running the company. But the late Adriano Olivetti and his successor Giuseppe Pero (TIME, March 21) had different ideas of the way to cure Underwood's troubles. Out went Beane and most of Underwood's aging top management. They were replaced by a crack Olivetti team headed by ebullient Ugo Galassi, 47, who had organized...
...Giuseppe Pero, 66, was elected president and chief executive of Italy's Olivetti company, succeeding Adriano Olivetti, who, before his death fortnight ago, transformed his father's small typewriter business into a worldwide manufacturer of office machines and machine tools. Directors passed over Olivetti's son Roberto and several other Olivetti family members to pick stumpy, white-maned Pero, the shrewd, early-rising (5:30 a.m.) executive who has been director general since 1938. He is expected to let Adriano Olivetti's political adventures (i.e., his Community Movement) die, devote all his efforts strictly to business...