Carlo Alfredo Piatti, born at Bergamo, Jan. 8, 1822, died at Crocette di
Mozzo – about four miles from Bergamo – at the residence of his son-in-law,
Count Carlo Lochis, on July 18, 1901.
His father, Antonio Piatti, born at Bergamo in 1801, was a violinist of some
repute, who held the post of leader in the orchestra of his native town. Piatti
began in his extreme youth to study the instrument which was destined to make
him famous. Given the option – at the age of five – of choosing between the
professions of violoncellist and cobbler, he decided in favour of the first, and
was promptly sent to his great-uncle Zanetti to receive instruction. Though an
old man at the time, Zanetti was an accomplished violoncellist, and a patient
teacher. He mode it a rule to seat his diminutive pupil in a chair placed upon a
table, and it was in this elevated position that the precocious child easily
mastered those ordinary difficulties, which severely tax most students. After
two years' study his great-uncle, considering his pupil sufficiently advanced,
applied for, and obtained permission for him to play in the theatre orchestra.
The only return he received for the serious physical effort of the engagement –
which lasted three months – was a present of ten francs from the Impresario,
half of which was retained by his great-uncle...
muchas gracias, bien interpretada, bella y desconocida musica
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