José Augusto Ferreira Veiga

José Augusto Ferreira Veiga, Viscount of Arneiro (22 November 1838, Portuguese Macau[1] – 7 June 1903, San Remo, Italy[1]) was a Portuguese composer, studying music with Botelho, Schira, and Soares in Lisbon.[2]

Composer José Augusto Ferreira Veiga in O Occidente (1885)

Veiga performed at the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos on 31 March 1876; his opera-ballet L’elisir di giovinezza (Jean-Jacques Magne) was not popular with the public, which led Veiga to present it the following year in Milan, Italy, at the Teatro Dal Verme. This presentation in 1877 also failed to win public favour. He then adapted the music to a new libretto by Rudolfo Paravicini that was based on an English novel by Ann Radcliffe. The new version, now a melodrama tragico named Dina la derelitta, was finally accepted by audiences upon being performed at Teatro Nacional de São Carlos on 14 March 1885.[2]

Visconde de Arneiro would write an opera, entitled Don Bibas, based on Alexandre Herculano’s previously unknown novel O Bobo (The Jester) but it has never been performed.[2]

José Augusto Ferreira Veiga died on 7 June 1903 in San Remo, Italy.[1]

Works edit

  • A questão do oriente (Operetta, Coimbra, Teatro Académico, 1859)[1][2]
  • Pela bocca morre o peixe (J. Guilerme dos Santos Lima/José Inácio de Araújo), (lyrical farce, 1860)[1]
  • Ginn (Ballet, Lisbon, 1866)[1][2]
  • Te Deum(Lisbon, 1871)[2]
  • L’elisir di giovinezza (4, Jean-Jacques Magne) (Opera-ballet, Lisbon, Teatro de S. Carlos, 31 March 1876)[1][2]
  • L’elisir di giovinezza (4, Jean-Jacques Magne) (Opera-ballet, Milan, Teatro Dal Verme (1877)[2]
  • Dina la derelitta (Rodolfo Paravicini nach Ann Radcliffe) (Melodrama tragico, Lisbon, Teatro de S. Carlos, 14 March 1885)[1][2]
  • Don Bibas (never performed)[1][2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i operone. "Veiga, José Augusto Ferreira, Visconde de Arneiro" (in German). Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Retrieved 30 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Luisa Cymbron. "José Augusto Ferreira Veiga, Visconde do Arneiro". Musicalics. Retrieved 23 January 2016.