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Pescara is the site of the Luisa D'Annunzio music conservatory (named for the mother of author Gabriele D'Annunzio, born in Abruzzo) and also the site of the annual Pescara Jazz Festival, one of the most noteworthy such festivals in Italy. The D'Annuzio Theater, built in 1963, is an important venue, as is the auditorium of the music conservatory.
Abruzzo is the 16th most productive region in the country, and is the 15th for GRP per capita among Italian regions. As of 2003, Abruzzo's per capita GDP was €19,506 or 84% of the national average of €23,181, compared to the average value for Southern Italy of €15,808. [48]
The Abruzzo region in central Italy. Abruzzo (historically pl.: Abruzzi) is an Italian wine region located in the mountainous central Italian region of Abruzzo, along the Adriatic Sea. It is bordered by the Molise wine region to the south, Marche to the north and Lazio to the west.
British Phonographic Industry (BPI) Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI) Country Music Association (CMA) Emirati Musicians' Association (EMA) in UAE; Federation of the Italian Music Industry (FIMI) GEMA in Germany; Gospel Music Association (GMA) Hong Kong Recording Industry Alliance (HKRIA) Harry Fox Agency; Indian Music Industry (IMI)
Tourism is key sector for Abruzzo economy: in this photo Campotosto Lake. Over the years, Abruzzo has become the most industrialized region of southern Italy [1] and has had significant improvements and growth also at an economic level; the region has reached and surpassed many Italian regions in the specialization of the various industrial sectors and today it is the richest of the regions of ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikivoyage; ... Economy of Abruzzo; Tourism in Abruzzo; Abruzzo Citra; The American (2010 film)
Italian folk music has a deep and complex history. National unification came quite late to the Italian peninsula , so its many hundreds of separate cultures remained un-homogenized until quite recently.
Landini's name was attached to his characteristic "Landini cadence" in which the final note of the melody dips down two notes before returning, such as C–B–A–C. Trecento music influenced northern musicians such as Johannes Ciconia, whose synthesis of the French and Italian styles presaged the "international" music typical of the Renaissance.