Goldberg, Joseph Pasquale
1825-1890
Singing teacher: born at Vienna. Was a violin pupil of
Mayseder, and of Seyfried in composition, appearing in public at twelve, when
he played a concerto of his own. Later he traveled in Italy as a concert
player, and in Paris met Meyerbeer and Rubini, who advised him to cultivate his
voice. He studied under the latter and under Bordogni, and afterward under
Lamperti, making a successful debut as a basso in 1843, at Genoa, in Donizeti's
opera, La Regina di Golconda. After a few years of stage life he grew weary of
it and retired to Paris, where he settled as a teacher of singing, appearing at
times in concert, however, with much success. In 1861 he removed to London,
where he became professor of music at the Royal Academy of Music. In 1871 he
undertook a commission from Correnti, the Minister of Public Instruction, to
investigate the conditions of instruction in the Italian Musical Conservatories
and suggest improvements where needed, which he fully carried out. He wrote a
few songs and a triumphal march for the entry of Victor Emanuel's troops into
Rome.
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