Skip to main content
Home
  • Magazine
  • News
  • New Organs
  • Videos
  • Resource Directory
  • 2020 Resource Directory
  • Classified ADS
  • Artists
  • Home
  • Events
  • 20 under 30
    • Nominate class of 2025
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Subscribe
Home
  • Magazine
  • News
  • New Organs
  • Videos
  • Resource Directory
  • Classified ADS
  • Artists
  • Events
  • 20 under 30
    • Nominate class of 2025

Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini dead at 87

Luigi Ferdinando Tagliavini, an Italian organist, harpsichordist, musicologist, teacher, and composer, died July 11 in Bologna, Italy.

Born October 7, 1929, in Bologna, he studied, organ, piano, and composition at the conservatory in Bologna, and later studied organ with Marcel Dupré at the conservatory in Paris, France. He graduated from the university at Padua in 1951. He taught at universities and conservatories in Bologna, Bolzano, and Parma in Italy and Freiburg in Switzerland. He was a guest instructor at various universities in the United States, including Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas. He regularly taught organ courses at Haarlem, the Netherlands, and at Pistoia, Italy. He served as organist of the Basilica of San Petronio, Bologna, sharing duties with Liuwe Tamminga. With Renato Lunelli, he founded the journal L’organo in 1960. An active performer, he presented recitals throughout Europe and the United States. 

Tagliavini was a recognized authority in historical performance practice for the Baroque organ and harpsichord, and was a strong supporter of the historic organ movement in Italy. He was a prolific recording artist, earning several awards for his LP and CD discs. He was awarded several honorary degrees, including a doctorate in music from the University of Edinburgh and a doctorate in sacred music from the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music in Rome. As a musicologist, he published numerous papers and edited critical editions of music.

A look at the life and contributions of Luigi Tagliavini is planned for a future issue of The Diapason. Also, see comments on Tagliavini’s work at Southern Methodist University in Larry Palmer’s “Harpsichord News” in the September issue of The Diapason.

Photo credit: Martin Goldray

Related News

Wilbur Held dead at 100
Read more
Yuko Hayashi dead at 88
Read more
Grace Church in New York Organ Festival
Read more
Harry Wilkinson dead at 92
Read more
Fr. Columba Kelly, OSB, dead at 87
Read more
Glatter-Goetz/Rosales Organ 20th anniversary concert
Read more
André Isoir dead at 81
Read more
Hartford Archdiocese reorganization
Read more
Sue Ellen Page Johnson dead at 67
Read more
Piccolo Spoleto L'Organo series
Read more
Sacred Music Intensive Course
Read more
Joe Utterback honored
Read more
Dessoff Choirs opens 92nd season
Read more
Christ Church, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan
Read more
St. Paul’s UMC Hosts Royal School of Church Music
Read more
Marilyn Mason retires
Read more
Stephen Tharp concert schedule
Read more
Douglas L. Rafter, 97, died July 3 in Portland, Maine
Read more
December 2025
View All Issues
Copyright ©2026 The Diapason. All rights reserved.