Francesco Paoli
(1820 - 1870)


Francesco Paoli (1820-1870) was a horn player, composer, and professor of horn at the Istituto Musicale di Firenze and court musician in service of His Imperial and Royal Highness Leopold II (1797-1870), Grand Duke of Tuscany. Francesco Paoli was born in Pescia (Tuscany) April 18, 1820. He started as an occasional player in the chamber music and orchestra of the grand-ducal court of Tuscany, and succeeded Antonio Tosoroni as the court's principal horn on February 15, 1846. He and Tosoroni were accademici professori at the Imperiale e Reale Accademia delle belle arti di Firenze. Leopold was deposed in 1859 and removed to Bologna, leaving Sig. Paoli unemployed for a short time. When the Music Institute of Florence was founded by decree of Victor Emmanuel II on March 15, 1860 he was immediately appointed maestro of brass instruments.

Sig. Paoli performed as principal horn at il Teatro in via della Pergola `(founded 1652) including the premiere of Verdi’s Macbeth., March 14, 1847. On August 11, 1851 he performed three of his own works for Corno a Macchina on a concert at the Grande Accademia Vocale ed Istrumentale, Bologna: “Fantasia per Corno sopra diversi motivi dell’Opera Borgia di Donizzetti”, “Capriccio per Corno tratto da diversi motivi dell’Opera Norma di Bellini”, and “Aria Finale nella Lucia di Donizzetti.”  A few years prior to his death he retired as first horn from the orchestra of the Pergola Theatre to concentrate his activities in the trade of musical instruments in Florence where he founded a well-appointed and highly esteemed store.

Francesco Paoli died in Florence of cardiac disease on January 15, 1870 leaving a considerable legacy of methods for the study of brass instruments. He was a teacher of brass instruments of the highest ability, as is proved by his many talented private and public students. He was succeeded at the Istituto Musicale di Firenze, by his pupil Luigi Viviani.1




Illustration from Paoli's Metodo teorico-pratico per il corno a macchina da potersi insegnare anche a quelli che non suonano il detto strumento,  [1855]. The unusual horn he is holding is typical of those found in bands in northern Italy, made by the firms of Ferdinando Roth, Giuseppe Pelitti,  Daniel Meinl and others.
Extant works for horn:
Idea del Corno a Maccihina, monografia, Milano: Ricordi (n.d.)
16 Studi per Corno a Macchina, Firenze : Ferd. Lorenzi
Metodo teorico-pratico per il corno a macchina da potersi insegnare anche a quelli che non suonano il detto strumento,  [1855],
“Fantasia per corno a macchina con accomp. di pianoforte tratta dall'opera Il Pirata di V. Bellini”, [1857]
“Capriccio per corno a macchina con accomp. di pianoforte tratto da diversi motivi dell'opera Norma”,  [1857]
 “Divertimento per corno a macchina con accompagnamento di pianoforte tratto dall'opera” Beatrice di Tenda, 1858
“Fantasia per corno a macchina con accomp.to di pianoforte sopra motivi dell'opera La Traviata di Verdi”, 1858
“Fantasia per corno a macchina con accomp.to di pianoforte sopra vari motivi dell'opera Lucrezia Borgia di Donizetti,
“Romanza per canto e corno a macchina con acc.to di piano-forte”, Firenze : G. Passerai,
Works for other instruments:
“I Verdiani : canzone nel Rigoletto per cornetta o tromba
Metodo progressivo per oficleide o bombardone, [circa 1866]
“Marcia trionfale per pianoforte”

Cronologia di tutti gli spettacoli rappresentati nel gran Teatro Comunale di Bologna, p. 149


Left, notice of a concert by the Grand Vocal and Instrumental Academy in the Community Theater of Bologna, August 11, 1851:
"The professor of valved horn Francesco Paoli assigned to his majesty's . Court of Tuscany has the honor to invite the learned Bolognese Public and illustrious garrison to a musical evening and entertainment in the aforementioned place, and will take part with the vocal artists Elena Mazza and Giuseppe Penso, and the young lady pianist Virginia Cenerelli and Signor Maestro Cesare Radicati Bertinotti as accompanist, who lend themselves nicely."
Below, title pages from Paoli's Metodo (1855) and Idea del Corno a Machina (n.d.). In the latter, Sr. Paoli suggests that valved horns in F be equipped with pezzi di cambio (tuning slide crooks) in the keys of Sol, Fa, Mi, and Mib for the purpose of playing in these and other keys more satisfactorily.

Theoretical and practical method for the valved horn that can teach even those who do not play on that instrument,  composed and dedicated to the distinguished amateur musician  Mr. Gaetano Donati by Francesco Paoli at the service of the House and Chapel of the His Majesty's Court of Tuscany
.

To the Students of the instrument  [an] Idea for the valved horn its compass and method of playing it as much for harmony as for singing in order to more easily have a good performance in the orchestra, by Francesco Paoli presently in the service of His Imperial and Royal Highness Leopold II, Archduke of Tuscany






 
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to Renato Meucci for providing the title page and illustration from Paoli's Metodo.


Notes
1. Luigi Viviani was born in 1845 in Lucignano (Arezzo), and died on June 27, 1903.  He performed in the most important orchestras in Florence as first horn, including the Orchestral Society of Jefte Sboici.
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References
Bignami, Luigi; Romani, Felice, Cronologia di tutti gli spettacoli rappresentati nel gran Teatro Comunale di Bologna dalla sua solenne apertura il 14 Maggio 1763 a tutto l' Autunno 1880, Bologna: Presso r Agenzia, 1880

Gazzetta Musicale Di Milano, January 23, 1870

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