Giuseppe Andreoli (7 July 1757 – 20 December 1832)[1] was a Milanese contrabassist.
Born in Milan, Andreoli was a member of the orchestra of La Scala. He was also proficient on the harp.[2] He became the first professor of bass at the Milan Conservatory in 1808.[3]
He was the first teacher who promoted the three-finger system developed by Bonifazio Asioli in his treatise Elementi per il Contrabasso con una Nuova Maniera di Digitare (1823), which flourished in Italy by the mid-nineteenth century.[3]
According to an 1840 letter from Paganini, Andreoli played an Amati bass,[4] which had three strings, tuned in fourths.[3]
The bassist was not related to the Andreoli family of pianists, who taught at the Milan Conservatory, including Carlo Andreoli and Guglielmo Andreoli.[2]