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Tommasini

[ tom-uh-see-nee; Italian tawm-mah-zee-nee ]

noun

  1. Vi·cen·zo [vee-, chen, -dzaw], 1880–1950, Italian composer.


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Example Sentences

The critic Anthony Tommasini, writing in The New York Times, said that Muhly’s score “could not have had a better advocate than the conductor Robert Spano, making an absurdly belated Met debut at 57.”

“He highlighted intriguing details, brought out myriad colorings, kept the pacing sure and never covered the singers,” Tommasini wrote.

Anthony Tommasini traveled to Italy and visited Roncole, Busseto, Sant’Agata and Milan to learn more about Giuseppe Verdi.

Anthony Tommasini, who was the chief classical music critic from 2000 to 2021, is a pianist who holds a Doctorate of Musical Arts from Boston University.

Anthony Tommasini, reviewing the premiere in The Times, called it “an important opera, the rare philosophical work that holds the stage and gives singing actors real characters to grapple with.”

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