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[[File:Carlo Guasco.jpg|thumb|184 px|<center>Carlo Guasco (1813–1876)]]
{{short description|Italian opera singer (1813–1876)}}
[[File:Carlo Guasco.jpg|thumb|Carlo Guasco]]
'''Carlo Guasco''' (16 March 1813 – 13 December 1876) was a celebrated Italian operatic [[tenor]] who sang in Italian and other European opera houses from 1837 to 1853. Although he sang in many world premieres, he is most remembered today for having created the leading tenor roles in [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]'s ''[[I Lombardi alla prima crociata]]'', ''[[Ernani]]'', and ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]''.
'''Carlo Guasco''' (16 March 1813 – 13 December 1876) was a celebrated Italian operatic [[tenor]] who sang in Italian and other European opera houses from 1837 to 1853. Although he sang in many world premieres, he is most remembered today for having created the leading tenor roles in [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]'s ''[[I Lombardi alla prima crociata]]'', ''[[Ernani]]'', and ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]''.


==Biography==
==Biography==


Carlo Guasco was born in [[Solero (AL)|Solero]], a small town in the [[Piedmont]] region of Italy. He showed an early talent for music and singing as well as mathematics, and initially trained as a surveyor at the [[University of Turin]].<ref>Regli (1860) p. 253</ref> He also studied piano with his cousin, Giuseppe Guasco. When the voice teacher and composer, Giacomo Panizza, heard Guasco's voice, he convinced him to give up his work as a surveyor and study with him in [[Milan]]. Guasco overcame the objections of his family to a career on the stage and began his studies with Panizza in September 1836. After only a few months, he made his stage debut at [[La Scala]] singing the relatively minor role of Ruodi in the 1837 production of [[Gioachino Rossini|Rossini]]'s ''[[William Tell (opera)|William Tell]]''. His debut was a great success and he soon went on to create the leading tenor roles in several operas, most notably in [[Gaetano Donizetti|Donizetti]]'s ''[[Maria di Rohan]]'' (1843) and [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]'s ''[[I Lombardi alla prima crociata]]'' (1843), ''[[Ernani]]'' (1844), and ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]'' (1846). During the course of his career, he sang throughout Italy, as well as in Paris, London, Madrid, [[Saint Petersburg]], and Vienna.
Carlo Guasco was born in [[Solero, Piedmont|Solero]], a small town in the [[Piedmont]] region of Italy. He showed an early talent for music and singing as well as mathematics, and initially trained as a surveyor at the [[University of Turin]].<ref>Regli (1860) p. 253</ref> He also studied piano with his cousin, Giuseppe Guasco. When the voice teacher and composer, Giacomo Panizza, heard Guasco's voice, he convinced him to give up his work as a surveyor and study with him in [[Milan]]. Guasco overcame the objections of his family to a career on the stage and began his studies with Panizza in September 1836. After only a few months, he made his stage debut at [[La Scala]] singing the relatively minor role of Ruodi in the 1837 production of [[Gioachino Rossini|Rossini]]'s ''[[William Tell (opera)|William Tell]]''. His debut was a great success and he soon went on to create the leading tenor roles in several operas, most notably in [[Gaetano Donizetti|Donizetti]]'s ''[[Maria di Rohan]]'' (1843) and [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]'s ''[[I Lombardi alla prima crociata]]'' (1843), ''[[Ernani]]'' (1844), and ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]'' (1846). During the course of his career, he sang throughout Italy, as well as in [[Paris]], [[London]], [[Madrid]], [[Saint Petersburg]], and [[Vienna]].


Guasco's voice, described by contemporary critics as "sweet rather than robust",<ref>quoted in Modugno (1989) p.281</ref> was well suited to the operas of Rossini, Donizetti, [[Giovanni Pacini|Pacini]], and [[Saverio Mercadante|Mercadante]], which formed his core repertoire in the early years of his career. However his voice was neither sweet nor robust in his performance on the opening night of ''Ernani''. A displeased Verdi wrote, "Yesterday we heard Ernani with Guasco without a voice and appallingly hoarse."<ref>Giuseppe Verdi quoted in Kimbell (1985) p. 135</ref> Guasco was hoarse from shouting all afternoon at the management of [[La Fenice]],<ref>Kimbell (1985) p. 135</ref> where the opera premiered on 9 March 1844. The backstage areas were in chaos, with the sets still not ready and costumes missing. One of his tirades reportedly went on for more than an hour.<ref>Phillips-Matz (1993) p. 158</ref> He was also nervous about taking on a role which he felt was ill-suited to his voice, and as late as three weeks before the premiere, he had tried to withdraw from the production.<ref>Kimbell (1985) p. 132</ref> Nevertheless, the opening night was a success for Verdi, and once Guasco settled into the role, Verdi's friend, Giovanni Barezzi, reported that Guasco's subsequent performances in the run were much improved.<ref>Kimbell (1985) p. 135</ref> Guasco sang ''Ernani'' again for its first performance at La Scala in September 1844. This time the critic for ''Il Bazar'' wrote:
Guasco's voice, described by contemporary critics as "sweet rather than robust",<ref>quoted in Modugno (1989) p. 281</ref> was well suited to the operas of Rossini, Donizetti, [[Giovanni Pacini|Pacini]], and [[Saverio Mercadante|Mercadante]], which formed his core repertoire in the early years of his career. However his voice was neither sweet nor robust in his performance on the opening night of ''Ernani''. A displeased Verdi wrote, "Yesterday we heard Ernani with Guasco without a voice and appallingly hoarse."<ref>Giuseppe Verdi quoted in Kimbell (1985) p. 135</ref> Guasco was hoarse from shouting all afternoon at the management of [[La Fenice]],<ref name=Kimbell135>Kimbell (1985) p. 135</ref> where the opera premiered on 9 March 1844. The backstage areas were in chaos, with the sets still not ready and costumes missing. One of his tirades reportedly went on for more than an hour.<ref>Phillips-Matz (1993) p. 158</ref> He was also nervous about taking on a role which he felt was ill-suited to his voice, and as late as three weeks before the premiere, he had tried to withdraw from the production.<ref>Kimbell (1985) p. 132</ref> Nevertheless, the opening night was a success for Verdi, and once Guasco settled into the role, Verdi's friend, Giovanni Barezzi, reported that Guasco's subsequent performances in the run were much improved.<ref name=Kimbell135 /> Guasco sang ''Ernani'' again for its first performance at La Scala in September 1844. This time the critic for ''Il Bazar'' wrote:
[[File:Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre 1825.jpg|thumb|left|200 px|The [[Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre]] in<br>Saint Petersburg where Carlo Guasco sang from 1846 to 1848]]
[[File:Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre 1825.jpg|thumb|left|[[Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre]] in Saint Petersburg where Guasco sang from 1846 to 1848]]
<blockquote>The always excellent first tenor, Carlo Guasco, gifted with a superbly even voice, sang and acted the role of the protagonist with exquisite artistry ... he persuaded everyone he is still a vocalist of the first magnitude and has no rivals when it comes to singing gracefully, sweetly, and emotionally.<ref>''Il Bazar'', 7 September 1844 quoted in Conati (1989) p. 247</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>The always excellent first tenor, Carlo Guasco, gifted with a superbly even voice, sang and acted the role of the protagonist with exquisite artistry ... he persuaded everyone he is still a vocalist of the first magnitude and has no rivals when it comes to singing gracefully, sweetly, and emotionally.<ref>''Il Bazar'', 7 September 1844 quoted in Conati (1989) p. 247</ref></blockquote>


After singing in [[Ferrara]] in the spring of 1846, Guasco went to Saint Petersburg on a contract with the Imperial Italian Opera. He appeared there with great success in ''Ernani'', ''Maria di Rohan'', ''[[Norma (opera)|Norma]]'', ''[[I due Foscari]]'', ''I Lombardi alla prima crociata'', and ''[[Linda di Chamounix]]''. At the end of the 1848 season, despite the offer of renewed contract, he returned to Italy and Solero, the town of his birth. He took what proved to be a temporary break from his career, devoting himself to the activities that he had enjoyed in his youth, especially hunting. In August 1851 he married, and at the urging of his young wife took up his career again. He accepted the offer of a contract for the 1852 carnival season at the [[Comédie-Italienne|Théâtre-Italien]] in Paris, where he again had a success in ''Ernani''. However, political upheaval following the [[French coup of 1851]], led to half-empty theatres, making life difficult for the [[impresario]]s and singers alike. In the spring of 1853, he was offered a contract for a few performances in Vienna, after which he retired from the stage.<ref>This account of the final years of Guasco's career is based on Regli (1860) pp. 255-256</ref> He returned again to Solero, where he became active in the town's administration. He also taught singing. His most notable pupil was the dramatic tenor, [[Giovanni De Negri]], who became a famous interpreter of Verdi's [[Otello]].
After singing in [[Ferrara]] in the spring of 1846, Guasco went to Saint Petersburg on a contract with the Imperial Italian Opera. He appeared there with great success in ''Ernani'', ''Maria di Rohan'', ''[[Norma (opera)|Norma]]'', ''[[I due Foscari]]'', ''I Lombardi alla prima crociata'', and ''[[Linda di Chamounix]]''. At the end of the 1848 season, despite the offer of renewed contract, he returned to Italy and Solero, the town of his birth. He took what proved to be a temporary break from his career, devoting himself to the activities that he had enjoyed in his youth, especially hunting. In August 1851 he married, and at the urging of his young wife took up his career again. He accepted the offer of a contract for the 1852 carnival season at the [[Comédie-Italienne|Théâtre-Italien]] in Paris, where he again had a success in ''Ernani''. However, political upheaval following the [[French coup of 1851]], led to half-empty theatres, making life difficult for the [[impresario]]s and singers alike. In the spring of 1853, he was offered a contract for a few performances in Vienna, after which he retired from the stage.<ref>This account of the final years of Guasco's career is based on Regli (1860) pp. 255–256</ref> He returned again to Solero, where he became active in the town's administration. He also taught singing. His most notable pupil was the dramatic tenor, [[Giovanni Battista De Negri]], who became a famous interpreter of Verdi's [[Otello]].


Carlo Guasco died in Solero on 13 December 1876 at the age of 63.
Guasco died in Solero on 13 December 1876 at the age of 63.


==Roles==
==Roles==
[[File:Maria di Rohan Premiere - Final Scene.jpg|thumb|200 px|right|[[Eugenia Tadolini]], Carlo Guasco, and [[Giorgio Ronconi]] in the final scene of Donizetti's ''[[Maria di Rohan]]'' at its world premiere in Vienna on 5 June 1843]]
[[File:Maria di Rohan Premiere - Final Scene.jpg|thumb|[[Eugenia Tadolini]], [[Giorgio Ronconi]], and Carlo Guasco in the final scene of Donizetti's ''[[Maria di Rohan]]'' at its world premiere in Vienna on 5 June 1843]]
*Ruodi, ''[[William Tell (opera)|Wiliam Tell]]'' by [[Gioachino Rossini]]
*Ruodi, ''[[William Tell (opera)|Wiliam Tell]]'' by [[Gioachino Rossini]]
*Gerardo, ''L'ammalata e il consulto'' by [[Giuseppe Manusardi]] (world premiere)
*Gerardo, ''L'ammalata e il consulto'' by Giuseppe Manusardi (world premiere, 1837 Milan)
*Ubaldo, ''Elena da Feltre'' by [[Saverio Mercadante]]
*Ubaldo, ''[[Elena da Feltre]]'' by [[Saverio Mercadante]]
*Arturo, ''[[Lucia di Lammermoor]]'' by [[Gaetano Donizetti]]
*Arturo, ''[[Lucia di Lammermoor]]'' by [[Gaetano Donizetti]]
*Decio, ''[[La vestale (Mercadante)|La vestale]]'' by Saverio Mercadante
*Decio, ''[[La vestale (Mercadante)|La vestale]]'' by Saverio Mercadante
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*Riccardo Percy, ''[[Anna Bolena]]'' by Gaetano Donizetti
*Riccardo Percy, ''[[Anna Bolena]]'' by Gaetano Donizetti
*Enrico, ''Giovanna I di Napoli'' by [[Pietro Antonio Coppola]]
*Enrico, ''Giovanna I di Napoli'' by [[Pietro Antonio Coppola]]
*Ernani, ''[[Ernani]]'' by Giuseppe Verdi (world premiere)
*Ernani, ''[[Ernani]]'' by [[Giuseppe Verdi]] (world premiere)
*Carlo VII, ''Giovanna d'Arco'' by Giuseppe Verdi
*Carlo VII, ''[[Giovanna d'Arco]]'' by Giuseppe Verdi
*Oliviero, ''[[Adelia (opera)|Adelia o La figlia dell'arciere]]'' by Gaetano Donizetti
*Oliviero, ''[[Adelia (opera)|Adelia o La figlia dell'arciere]]'' by Gaetano Donizetti
*Selim, ''La sposa d'Abido'' by [[Józef Michał Poniatowski]] (world premiere)
*Selim, ''La sposa d'Abido'' by [[Józef Michał Poniatowski]] (world premiere)
*Foresto, ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]'' by Giuseppe Verdi (world premiere)
*Foresto, ''[[Attila (opera)|Attila]]'' by Giuseppe Verdi (world premiere)
*Galeotto Manfredi, ''Galeotto Manfredi'' by Carlo Hermann (world premiere)
*Galeotto Manfredi, ''Galeotto Manfredi'' by Carlo Hermann (world premiere, 1842 Verona)
*Gonzalvo, ''Vallombra'' by [[Federico Ricci]]
*Gonzalvo, ''Vallombra'' by [[Federico Ricci]]
*Gerardo di Coucy, ''La regina di Cipro'' by [[Giovanni Pacini]]
*Gerardo di Coucy, ''La regina di Cipro'' by [[Giovanni Pacini]]
*Il Conte di San Megrino, ''Caterina di Cleves'' by [[Luigi Savi]]
*Il Conte di San Megrino, ''Caterina di Cleves'' by Luigi Savi
*Orombello, ''[[Beatrice di Tenda]]'' by [[Vincenzo Bellini]]
*Orombello, ''[[Beatrice di Tenda]]'' by [[Vincenzo Bellini]]


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==Sources==
==Sources==
*{{Almanacco|match=Carlo Guasco|label=Performances by Carlo Guasco}}
*Conati, M., "Observations on the early reviews of Verdi's ''Ernani'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=wbh7vjaphocC&q=Guasco ''Ernani yesterday and today''], Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. {{ISBN|88-85065-06-6}}
*Kimbell, David R., [https://books.google.com/books?id=SWs7AAAAIAAJ&q=Guasco ''Verdi in the Age of Italian Romanticism''], Cambridge University Press Archive, 1985. {{ISBN|0-521-31678-2}}
*Modugno, M., "The discography of ''Ernani'', 1899–1985", [https://books.google.com/books?id=wbh7vjaphocC&dq=%22Carlo+Guasco%22&pg=PA281 ''Ernani yesterday and today''], Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. {{ISBN|88-85065-06-6}}
*[[Mary Jane Phillips-Matz|Phillips-Matz, Mary Jane]], ''Verdi: A Biography'', Oxford University Press, 1993, {{ISBN|978-0-19-313204-7}}
*[[Francesco Regli|Regli, Francesco]], [https://books.google.com/books?id=lOXVtYmW4hMC&dq=%22Guasco%2C+Carlo%22&pg=PA253 "Guasco, Carlo"], ''Dizionario biografico dei più celebri poeti ed artisti melodrammatici, tragici e comici, maestri, concertisti, coreografi, mimi, ballerini, scenografi, giornalisti, impresarii, ecc. ecc. che fiorirono in Italia dal 1800 al 1860'', E. Dalmazzo, 1860, pp.&nbsp;253–256 (in Italian)

==Further reading==
*Appolonia, Giorgio, "Carlo Guasco, un tenore per Verdi" EDA, Torino, 2001
*Appolonia, Giorgio, "Carlo Guasco, un tenore per Verdi" EDA, Torino, 2001
*Romagnoli, Carlo, ''Solero: vita quotidiana nei secoli'', Edizioni dell'Orso, 1987 (in Italian)
*Casaglia, Gherardo, [http://www.amadeusonline.net/almanacco.php?Start=0&Giorno=&Mese=&Anno=&Giornata=&Testo=Guasco&Parola=Stringa "Guasco"], ''Almanacco Amadeus''. Accessed 2 September 2009 (in Italian).

*Conati, M., "Observations on the early reviews of Verdi's ''Ernani'', [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wbh7vjaphocC&q=Guasco#v=snippet&q=Guasco&f=false ''Ernani yesterday and today''], Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. ISBN 88-85065-06-6
{{Portal bar|Biography|Opera}}
*Kimbell, David R., [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=SWs7AAAAIAAJ&q=Guasco#v=snippet&q=Guasco&f=false ''Verdi in the Age of Italian Romanticism''], Cambridge University Press Archive, 1985. ISBN 0-521-31678-2
{{Authority control}}
*Modugno, M., "The discography of ''Ernani'', 1899-1985", [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wbh7vjaphocC&pg=PA281&dq=%22Carlo+Guasco%22&lr=&as_brr=3#v=onepage&q=%22Carlo%20Guasco%22&f=false ''Ernani yesterday and today''], Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. ISBN 88-85065-06-6
*Phillips-Matz, Mary Jane, ''Verdi: A Biography'', Oxford University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-19-313204-7
*Regli, Francesco, [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lOXVtYmW4hMC&pg=PA253&dq=%22Guasco,+Carlo%22&lr=&as_brr=3#v=onepage&q=%22Guasco%2C%20Carlo%22&f=false "Guasco, Carlo"], ''Dizionario biografico dei più celebri poeti ed artisti melodrammatici, tragici e comici, maestri, concertisti, coreografi, mimi, ballerini, scenografi, giornalisti, impresarii, ecc. ecc. che fiorirono in Italia dal 1800 al 1860'', E. Dalmazzo, 1860, pp.&nbsp;253–256 (in Italian)
*Romagnoli, Carlo, ''Solero: vita quotidiana nei secoli'', Edizioni dell'Orso, 1987 (in Italian)


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Guasco, Carlo
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = 16 March 1813
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 13 December 1876
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Guasco, Carlo}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Guasco, Carlo}}
[[Category:Operatic tenors]]
[[Category:Italian operatic tenors]]
[[Category:Italian opera singers]]
[[Category:1813 births]]
[[Category:1813 births]]
[[Category:1876 deaths]]
[[Category:1876 deaths]]
[[Category:People from the Province of Alessandria]]
[[Category:People from Solero]]
[[Category:Article Feedback 5]]
[[Category:19th-century Italian male opera singers]]

Latest revision as of 08:51, 29 January 2024

Carlo Guasco

Carlo Guasco (16 March 1813 – 13 December 1876) was a celebrated Italian operatic tenor who sang in Italian and other European opera houses from 1837 to 1853. Although he sang in many world premieres, he is most remembered today for having created the leading tenor roles in Verdi's I Lombardi alla prima crociata, Ernani, and Attila.

Biography[edit]

Carlo Guasco was born in Solero, a small town in the Piedmont region of Italy. He showed an early talent for music and singing as well as mathematics, and initially trained as a surveyor at the University of Turin.[1] He also studied piano with his cousin, Giuseppe Guasco. When the voice teacher and composer, Giacomo Panizza, heard Guasco's voice, he convinced him to give up his work as a surveyor and study with him in Milan. Guasco overcame the objections of his family to a career on the stage and began his studies with Panizza in September 1836. After only a few months, he made his stage debut at La Scala singing the relatively minor role of Ruodi in the 1837 production of Rossini's William Tell. His debut was a great success and he soon went on to create the leading tenor roles in several operas, most notably in Donizetti's Maria di Rohan (1843) and Verdi's I Lombardi alla prima crociata (1843), Ernani (1844), and Attila (1846). During the course of his career, he sang throughout Italy, as well as in Paris, London, Madrid, Saint Petersburg, and Vienna.

Guasco's voice, described by contemporary critics as "sweet rather than robust",[2] was well suited to the operas of Rossini, Donizetti, Pacini, and Mercadante, which formed his core repertoire in the early years of his career. However his voice was neither sweet nor robust in his performance on the opening night of Ernani. A displeased Verdi wrote, "Yesterday we heard Ernani with Guasco without a voice and appallingly hoarse."[3] Guasco was hoarse from shouting all afternoon at the management of La Fenice,[4] where the opera premiered on 9 March 1844. The backstage areas were in chaos, with the sets still not ready and costumes missing. One of his tirades reportedly went on for more than an hour.[5] He was also nervous about taking on a role which he felt was ill-suited to his voice, and as late as three weeks before the premiere, he had tried to withdraw from the production.[6] Nevertheless, the opening night was a success for Verdi, and once Guasco settled into the role, Verdi's friend, Giovanni Barezzi, reported that Guasco's subsequent performances in the run were much improved.[4] Guasco sang Ernani again for its first performance at La Scala in September 1844. This time the critic for Il Bazar wrote:

Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in Saint Petersburg where Guasco sang from 1846 to 1848

The always excellent first tenor, Carlo Guasco, gifted with a superbly even voice, sang and acted the role of the protagonist with exquisite artistry ... he persuaded everyone he is still a vocalist of the first magnitude and has no rivals when it comes to singing gracefully, sweetly, and emotionally.[7]

After singing in Ferrara in the spring of 1846, Guasco went to Saint Petersburg on a contract with the Imperial Italian Opera. He appeared there with great success in Ernani, Maria di Rohan, Norma, I due Foscari, I Lombardi alla prima crociata, and Linda di Chamounix. At the end of the 1848 season, despite the offer of renewed contract, he returned to Italy and Solero, the town of his birth. He took what proved to be a temporary break from his career, devoting himself to the activities that he had enjoyed in his youth, especially hunting. In August 1851 he married, and at the urging of his young wife took up his career again. He accepted the offer of a contract for the 1852 carnival season at the Théâtre-Italien in Paris, where he again had a success in Ernani. However, political upheaval following the French coup of 1851, led to half-empty theatres, making life difficult for the impresarios and singers alike. In the spring of 1853, he was offered a contract for a few performances in Vienna, after which he retired from the stage.[8] He returned again to Solero, where he became active in the town's administration. He also taught singing. His most notable pupil was the dramatic tenor, Giovanni Battista De Negri, who became a famous interpreter of Verdi's Otello.

Guasco died in Solero on 13 December 1876 at the age of 63.

Roles[edit]

Eugenia Tadolini, Giorgio Ronconi, and Carlo Guasco in the final scene of Donizetti's Maria di Rohan at its world premiere in Vienna on 5 June 1843

References[edit]

  1. ^ Regli (1860) p. 253
  2. ^ quoted in Modugno (1989) p. 281
  3. ^ Giuseppe Verdi quoted in Kimbell (1985) p. 135
  4. ^ a b Kimbell (1985) p. 135
  5. ^ Phillips-Matz (1993) p. 158
  6. ^ Kimbell (1985) p. 132
  7. ^ Il Bazar, 7 September 1844 quoted in Conati (1989) p. 247
  8. ^ This account of the final years of Guasco's career is based on Regli (1860) pp. 255–256

Sources[edit]

  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Performances by Carlo Guasco". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Conati, M., "Observations on the early reviews of Verdi's Ernani, Ernani yesterday and today, Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. ISBN 88-85065-06-6
  • Kimbell, David R., Verdi in the Age of Italian Romanticism, Cambridge University Press Archive, 1985. ISBN 0-521-31678-2
  • Modugno, M., "The discography of Ernani, 1899–1985", Ernani yesterday and today, Volume 10 of Bollettino of the Istituto nazionale di studi verdiani, EDT srl, 1989. ISBN 88-85065-06-6
  • Phillips-Matz, Mary Jane, Verdi: A Biography, Oxford University Press, 1993, ISBN 978-0-19-313204-7
  • Regli, Francesco, "Guasco, Carlo", Dizionario biografico dei più celebri poeti ed artisti melodrammatici, tragici e comici, maestri, concertisti, coreografi, mimi, ballerini, scenografi, giornalisti, impresarii, ecc. ecc. che fiorirono in Italia dal 1800 al 1860, E. Dalmazzo, 1860, pp. 253–256 (in Italian)

Further reading[edit]

  • Appolonia, Giorgio, "Carlo Guasco, un tenore per Verdi" EDA, Torino, 2001
  • Romagnoli, Carlo, Solero: vita quotidiana nei secoli, Edizioni dell'Orso, 1987 (in Italian)