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The Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana (FIMI) or the Federation of the Italian Music Industry [1] is an umbrella organization that keeps track of virtually all aspects of the music recording industry in Italy. It was established in 1992, when major corporate labels left the previously existing Associazione dei Fonografici Italiani (AFI).
Inner court of the conservatory. The conservatory was established by a royal decree of 1807 in Milan, capital of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy.It opened the following year with premises in the cloisters of the Baroque church of Santa Maria della Passione.
Palermo – Conservatorio di Musica "Alessandro Scarlatti" (formerly Conservatorio di Musica "Vincenzo Bellini) Parma – Conservatorio di Musica "Arrigo Boito" Perugia – Conservatorio di Musica "Francesco Morlacchi" Pesaro – Conservatorio Statale di Musica "Gioachino Rossini" Pescara – Conservatorio "Luisa D'Annunzio"
Le arti e le tradizioni popolari in Italia. Primo documentario per la storia dell'etnofonia in Italia (in Italian). Udine: Edizioni Idea. Brody, Elaine (1978). The Music Guide to Italy. Dodd, Mead. ISBN 0-396-07436-7. Gordon, Bonnie (2005). Monteverdi's Unruly Women: The Power of Song in Early Modern Italy. Cambridge University Press.
Italian popular music is musical output which is not usually considered academic or classical music but rather has its roots in the popular traditions, and it may be defined in two ways: it can either be defined in terms of the current geographical location of the Italian Republic with the exceptions of the Germanic South Tyrol and the eastern portion of Friuli-Venezia Giulia; alternatively ...
The Florence Conservatory was founded as the Istituto Musicale (English: Musical Institute) in 1849. [1] It was established on 6 August 1849 by a decree from Leopold II, Grand Duke of Tuscany with Giovanni Pacini appointed the school's first director. [3]
It was founded in October 1945 in Milan, Italy, on the initiative of the journalist and musicologist Aldo Mario De Luigi, a former record executive at La Voce Del Padrone-Columbia-Marconiphone (VCM, now EMI Italy). [2] Originally, the magazine was published under the name Musica (Dischi was added on the second edition) on a monthly basis. [2]
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