Italian-born Argentine composer, music educator, and lawyer
Julio César Brero(also spelledGiulio Cesare; 20 December 1908
Milan – 8 December 1973
Milan) was an Italian-born Argentine composer, music educator, and lawyer.[1]
He was professor of choral singing at the Bossi Academy of Music, Milan. Brero lived fifteen years in Argentina (beginning in the 1940s), where he became prolific in the field of music, in particular, as a teacher of harmony and counterpoint at the
National Conservatory of Buenos Aires.
Selected works
"Lyrics", for piano and voice / and for piano and orchestra (1933)
"Concerto for String Orchestra" (1933);
OCLC20832598
"Suite", for cello (1935)
"Lyrics", for voice and piano (1936)
"Melodies", for voice and piano (1946)
"Toccata", for piano (1945)
"Concertino", for cello and small orchestra (1947)
"38 Songs of Italian folklore", for voice and piano (1949);
OCLC317262499
"Trio" (1949)
"Divertimento" in B♭ for flute, clarinet and bassoon (1955);
OCLC20116415