Crisantemi, SC65 (Puccini)
Movements
Notes
Crisantemi, (Chrysanthemums), SC 65, is a composition for string quartet written by Giacomo Puccini in 1890 as a tribute to the death of Amadeo I of Spain, a son of the Italian King, Vittorio Emanuele II. Puccini had already composed the operas Le Villi in 1884 and Edgar in 1890. The opera was not a success (Puccini repeatedly revised it until the last performance in Buenos Aires, in 1905, before declaring the work irredeemable). A few months after the failed debut of Edgar, Puccini started writing his masterpiece Manon Lescaut. Suddenly in 1890 at just 44 years old, Amadeo I of Spain died due to lung disease. Deeply moved by Amadeo I of Spain’s death, Puccini wrote this work in a sudden burst of inspiration, just in a night. White chrysanthemums (in Italian crisantemi) are used in Italy only for funerals or on graves. Crisantemi was first played on 26 January 1890. After its successful performance, Puccini incorporated themes from Crisantemi into Manon Lescaut.