ITEM

Inno a Roma Item Info

Inno a Roma - item

Object ID:
demo_0297
Creator:
La Voce del Padrone
Type of Sound:
Music
Music Composer:
Giacomo Puccini; Alessandro Vessella
Instruments:
Fanfare; Conductor
Type of Music:
Hymn
Date:
1934
Identifier:
HN 555
Linked Recording:
demo_0298
Rights:
metadata-only record, please check the publication for rights
Description:
Composed in 1918 by Giacomo Puccini, "Inno a Roma" became a vehicle for celebrating the Italian capital during the "ventennio". As the former capital of the Roman Empire, of which it preserves many vestiges, Rome was the object of a myth and a cult of "Romanity" ("romanità"), because of its embodiment of the history, symbols and values of the ancient empire (military power, heroism, imperialism, grandeur, glory), elements on which the Fascist regime based its own symbolic apparatus and national imaginary. From the early 1920s, the city was remodeled to showcase the Roman ruins, at the cost of destroying part of its later architectural heritage. Linking the Colosseum to Piazza Venezia, from which Benito Mussolini worked and delivered some of the most important speeches of the Fascist period, the "Via dell'Impero" (today's "Via dei Fori Imperiali"), laid out between 1924 and 1932 to better showcase the many sites that line it, is an eloquent testimony to this highly symbolic urban policy. In Fascist discography, "Inno a Roma" is most often accompanied by a propaganda recording.
Online Resources:
https://canzoneitaliana.it/en/canzone/inno-a-roma-6-en/
Performers:
Corpo musicale della Regia Marina Italiana Pietro Carlo Aghemo
Music by:
Giacomo Puccini Alessandro Vessella
Instruments:
Fanfare Conductor
Genre:
Hymn
Sound Type:
Music
Related Record:
demo_0298
Source
Preferred Citation:
"Inno a Roma", REDIRE Database, Bonn Center for Digital Humanities (BCDH)
Reference Link:
http://localhost:4000/items/demo_0297.html
Rights
Rights:
metadata-only record, please check the publication for rights
Standardized Rights:
La Voce del Padrone, Catalogo generale, October 1, 1934