John De Leo Jazzabilly Lovers feat. Rita Marcotulli and Gianluca Petrella
Lugo, Pavaglione |
30 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
John De Leo Jazzabilly Lovers
feat. Rita Marcotulli and Gianluca Petrella
John De Leovocals Enrico Terragnoliguitar Stefano Senni double bass Fabio Nobiledrum
Rita Marcotulli piano Gianluca Petrella trombone
in collaboration with Lugocontemporanea
Of all the experimental jazz singers in Italy today, John De Leo is one of the most interesting: with his malleable voice, his unclassifiable style and his taste for musical adventure, he has created the Jazzabilly Quartet, a project he has had in mind for years, in which rock ’n’ roll and jazz are mixed in a bewildering and entertaining way. Presley and Coltrane, the Stray Cats and jazz standards are juxtaposed and transformed by De Leo with unbridled gusto as he explores possible connections between seemingly incompatible repertoires, always in a playful spirit in which voice and instruments perform bewildering somersaults and jump between styles with consistency and curiosity. Regularly supported by his no less brilliant trio, De Leo is joined on this occasion by two truly exceptional guests: Rita Marcotulli, an incomparable improviser whose sound is unique and inspired, and and the imaginative, trustworthy yet unpredictable trombonist Gianluca Petrella.
mar – Museo d’Arte della Città di Ravenna |
29 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Philharmonic Five Viennese Style
Tibor Kováč violin
Lara Kusztrich violin
Elmar Landerer viola
Edison Pashko cello
Adela Liculescu piano
music Sergej Prokof’ev, Robert Schumann, John Williams, Fritz Kreisler, Giacomo Puccini, Charles Aznavour,
Tibor Kovácˇ, Gustav Mahler, Dave Tarras, Sylvia Neufeld
A small ensemble for big musical challenges. Four soloists from the legendary Vienna Philharmonic, accompanied by a piano, have joined forces to reinvent the concept of the orchestra with their strikingly original performance choices. The Viennese ensemble loves to take its audiences on unexpected and electrifying journeys through eras and musical styles that are seemingly far apart: from the great classics to pop music, film, and ballet; from grand opéra to French chansons or the klezmer repertoire. Not just the usual crossover, but a virtuoso challenge based on surprising combinations and highly sophisticated practices. A Mission Possible, as stated in the title of their first album, released in 2018, when the “Phil Five” embarked on their adventure as a quintet in Wien, the world capital of great music.
Tribute to Byron for the 200th anniversary of his death (1788-1824)
mar – Museo d’Arte della Città di Ravenna |
27 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Tribute to Byron for the 200th anniversary of his death (1788-1824) Ian Bostridgetenor Julius Drakepiano
texts by Lord Byron read by Lucasta Miller
music Isaac Nathan, Johann Carl Gottfried Loewe, Robert Schumann, Franz Schubert, Ludwig van Beethoven,
Johannes Friedrich Fröhlich, Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, Fanny Mendelssohn-Bartholdy Hensel, Hugo Wolf
Ian Bostridge and Julius Drake, undoubtedly two of the most authoritative interpreters of the Lied repertoire, are called upon to follow in the footsteps of the eccentric and adventurous Romantic poet George Gordon Byron. Here are the Hebrew Melodies, poems written to accompany music by Isaac Nathan, but also set by the likes of Schumann, Loewe and Beethoven. Also Wilhelm Müller, the author of the texts for Schubert’s cycles Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, was well acquainted with the work of the English poet and, like him, supported the cause of Greek independence. If Byron’s verses flow through the history of 19th century Lied like a karst river, his presence will be acknowledged through a reading of his poems by the writer and literary critic Lucasta Miller.
Basilica di Sant’Apollinare in Classe |
23 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Mass for Sant’Apollinare
La Cappella Marciana conductor Marco Gemmani
Giovanni Legrenzi Messa a San Marco per Sant’Aponal (Sant’Apollinare) Venice 1670
The Po Valley was evangelised during the first centuries of Christianity, which explains why the most important cities here often share the same founding martyr saints. For example, the memory of Saint Apollinaris, the proto-bishop whom Ravenna chose as its patron saint and whose remains it still preserves, is also solemnly celebrated in Venice, in the Basilica of Saint Mark, on 23 July. In 1670 the choirmaster of the Venetian Basilica, Giovanni Legrenzi, was probably commissioned to compose for the occasion. Born in Bergamo, Legrenzi was a key figure in the development of instrumental music, laying the foundations for its success in the following century. And although it is not certain that Antonio Vivaldi was his pupil, he certainly listened to his music and adopted its basic features.
Figli d’Arte Cuticchio Histoire du soldat music Igor Stravinsky libretto Charles Ferdinand Ramuz
voice, stage adaptation and directionMimmo Cuticchio
Soloists of the Orchestra Giovanile Luigi Cherubini conductor Giovanni Conti
«Those who maintain that they only enjoy music to the full with their eyes shut do not hear better than when they have them open; on the contrary, the absence of visual distractions enables them to abandon themselves to the reveries induced by the lullaby of its sounds» (Stravinsky). So, why not entrust Mimmo Cuticchio’s puppets with a new tale about a violin-playing soldier duped by the devil? The wooden-heads are the ‘siblings’ of Petruška, whom the Russian composer himself considered «the immortal and unhappy hero of every fairs in all countries». Cuticchio’s ‘cuntu’ and the gestural expressiveness of his puppets will provide nourishment for the listener’s visual and auditory intelligence, while the Cherubini Soloists, conducted by the young Giovanni Conti, will bring the score to life.
on the 100th anniversary of Luigi Nono's birth (1924-1990)
Artificerie Almagià |
08 June 2024 | at 9:00 PM
On the 100th anniversary of Luigi Nono’s birth (1924-1990) Il Nuovo e l’Antico
La Stagione Armonica conductorSergio Balestracci Roberto Fabbricianibass flute Alvise Vidolinlive electronics and magnetic tape
Tomás Luis de Victoria
pieces from Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae in Passione Domini
Luigi Nono Das atmende Klarsein for small choir, bass flute, live electronics and magnetic tape
An extraordinarily fecund relationship links the Italian ‘new music’ of the post-war period with history. Luigi Nono, in particular, used technology to rethink sound emission techniques, reverberation, and the relationship with space. He traced this approach back to the ancient Venetian tradition, which he explored in Das atmende Klarsein, now entrusted to two of his faithful collaborators, Roberto Fabbriciani and Alvise Vidolin. This meditation on death, edited by Massimo Cacciari, draws on Rilke’s DuinoElegies and on texts inscribed on Orphic tablets found in the tombs of deceased mystery-cult initiates. Death and the relationship between the human and the divine are also explored in the vocal counterpoint inspired by the Holy Week Office of Tomás Luis de Victoria, a great Spanish composer who worked in Rome during Palestrina’s time.
L’Amfiparnaso di Orazio Vecchi Comedia harmonica for five-voice mixed choir and actors (revisited by Sergio Balestracci)
La Stagione Armonica conductor Sergio Balestracci direction Alessandro Bressanello
Alessia Donadio, Alessandro Bressanelloactors Carlo Rossiharpsichord Silvia De Rossoviol Sergio Balestracciflute
Orazio Vecchi, the choirmaster in the cathedral of Modena between the 16th and 17th centuries, was one of the few who knew how to bend the expressiveness of the polyphonic madrigal towards the comic, loading it with a popular theatricality that was unprecedented in the Renaissance practice of “singing upon the book”. His literary influences were not the popular poets of the time, such as Tasso, Guarini, and Petrarch, but rather vernacular poets like Giulio Cesare Croce, the author of the adventures of Bertoldo. In his ‘harmonic comedy’ L’Amfiparnaso, characters like the stuttering old miser Pantalone, his servant Predolino, the classic lovers’ couple, and the pedantic Graziano are featured. Vecchi’s theatre is built on endless allusions, while the music supports and encourages the free mixing of sound, song, acting, dance and pantomime. Not surprisingly, all specialties of the Commedia dell’Arte.
Milano Marittima, Rotonda Primo Maggio |
06 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Il Trebbo in musica 2.4 Talk with Pupi Avati on music, films, and life
Quartetto Jazz
Teo Ciavarella piano Checco Coniglio trombone Alfredo Ferrario clarinet
Francesco Angiuli double bass
premiere
with the contribution of Cooperativa Bagnini Cervia
Pupi Avati’s cinema is rooted in familiar places, 20th-century moods, genuine emotions, unspoken feelings, castrating shyness and surprising horrors. It balances the reassuring with the unexpected, always giving music an important role to play. Perhaps because jazz was the first muse of the Bolognese maestro, whose filmography includes titles such as Jazz Band, Dancing Paradise and Bix, testimony to a passion that led him to cross paths with the extraordinary talent of Lucio Dalla. But Avati’s career has also been marked by long-standing collaborations with musicians and composers such as Henghel Gualdi, Amedeo Tommasi and Riz Ortolani, other protagonists of crucial periods in Italian music.
Milano Marittima, Arena dello Stadio dei Pini |
13 June 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Il Trebbo in musica 2.4
Tribute for the 100th anniversary of the composer’s death (1924–2024) Laura Morante inPrime donne
The women in Giacomo Puccini’s works
texts Laura Morante music Giacomo Puccini concept Elena Marazzita
Laura Morantenarrator
Francesca De Blasi soprano
Davide Alogna violin
Antonello d’Onofrio piano
with the contribution of Cooperativa Bagnini Cervia
Sensitive and sensual women, all strong and vital, often hopelessly committed to self-sacrifice: a female kaleidoscope emerges from the catalogue of Giacomo Puccini’s operas. In each title, the personality of a different heroine unfolds as she meets the fate that the Maestro and his librettists have devised for her. These captivating stories now come to life through the narration of a talented actress, Laura Morante: Tosca, charming, haughty and jealous, ready to take extreme measures against the man who tried to violate her dignity; the mysterious Turandot, a prisoner of her own emotions, denying herself the joys of love; Manon, torn between conflicting feelings, from the most contagious joy to obscure vulnerability; and finally the fragile Butterfly, the victim of an unrealistic dream. Their characters and personalities are, of course, enhanced by Puccini’s music.
Basilica di Sant’Apollinare in Classe |
24 May 2024 | at 9:30 PM
Franz Joseph Haydn The Creation Die Schöpfung
Oratorio for soloists, choir, and orchestra Hob:XXI:2
conductorOttavio Dantone
Charlotte Bowden soprano Martin Vanbergtenor Andre Morsch bass
Accademia Bizantina
Philharmonia Chor Wien choirmasterWalter Zeh
When Haydn, no longer a young man and freed from his obligations to the Esterházy family, accepted an invitation from the impresario Salomon to go to London, he ‘discovered’ the success that Handel’s oratorios enjoyed there. On his return to Vienna, he brought with him a libretto based on Genesis and Milton’s Paradise Lost: translated into German by Gottfried van Swieten, this became the starting point for his most famous oratorio. The idea of the world’s creation is presented through a formal elaboration process, beginning with the well-known overture, ‘The Representation of Chaos’. But when the archangel Raphael begins to narrate the story of Genesis, the chorus announces the light, and a sudden C major chord initiates the creative process, ushering in life. The Accademia Bizantina and the Vienna Philharmonic Choir make an excellent partnership to restore the refined richness of this piece.