Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at luigi cherubini.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Luigi Cherubini.
Examples
-
It was equally bold of Luigi Cherubini to write an opera in 1797 that went even further by shaping perceptions of a woman at least as much a victim of her crime as its perpetrator.
Rodney Punt: Medea Takes Revenge in an Abandoned Warehouse Rodney Punt 2011
-
Born in Florence, the Italian cradle of the European Renaissance, Luigi Cherubini had moved to France just over a decade before, and took to calling himself "Louis."
Rodney Punt: Cherubini's Medea to Launch Long Beach Opera's New Season Rodney Punt 2011
-
Born in Florence, the Italian cradle of the European Renaissance, Luigi Cherubini had moved to France just over a decade before, and took to calling himself "Louis."
Rodney Punt: Cherubini's Medea to Launch Long Beach Opera's New Season Rodney Punt 2011
-
Decades later, no less a creative dynamo than Richard Wagner was still assiduously studying the scores of Luigi Cherubini.
Rodney Punt: Medea Takes Revenge in an Abandoned Warehouse Rodney Punt 2011
-
New subjects extolling liberty became popular in the works of the Paris-based Italian Luigi Cherubini, the contemporary most admired by Beethoven.
-
Born in Florence, the Italian cradle of the European Renaissance, Luigi Cherubini had moved to France just over a decade before, and took to calling himself "Louis."
Rodney Punt: Cherubini's Medea to Launch Long Beach Opera's New Season Rodney Punt 2011
-
(Soundbite of music) HOFFMAN: That's from the "Hymne a la Victoire," or "Hymn to Victory" by Luigi Cherubini, a celebratory piece from 1796, during the French Revolution.
-
(Soundbite of music) HOFFMAN: That's from the "Hymne a la Victoire," or "Hymn to Victory" by Luigi Cherubini, a celebratory piece from 1796, during the French Revolution.
-
(Soundbite of music) HOFFMAN: That's from the "Hymne a la Victoire," or "Hymn to Victory" by Luigi Cherubini, a celebratory piece from 1796, during the French Revolution.
-
After the Bardi chapel follow the Zamoyska mausoleum, with a painted reredos by Ligozzi, and the monument to the composer Luigi Cherubini (d. 1842), by Fantacchiotti.
The South of France—East Half C. B. Black
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.