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Accademia Vivaldi 2019 scholarships

 

Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi

Director: Francesco Fanna

 

Accademia Vivaldi 2019

Masterclass on the performance practice of the music of Antonio Vivaldi

 

Venice, Fondazione Giorgio Cini, 6th – 9th February; 6th -9th March; 10th – 13th April;

22nd – 25th May; 10th – 13th July; 18th-21st September; 23rd – 26th October; 25th – 30th November.

 

Deadlines for presentation of requests: 21st January; 11th February; 11th March; 15th April; 10th June; 19th August; 23th September; 28th October.

 

The Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi organizes eight meetings on the performance practice of the compositions by Antonio Vivaldi, dedicated to young singers (max 39 years) and musicians.

Each meeting will take place at Fondazione Giorgio Cini, on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore, in Venice, and will last for three whole days, from 2 pm on the first day to 1 pm on the fourth day.

The teachers are Gemma Bertagnolli (singing), Giorgio Fava (violin), Walter Vestidello (cello) and Antonio Frigé (Basso continuo).

 

Calendar

From 6th to 9th February: Vivaldian vocality: sacred music, chamber singings, operas (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 6th to 9th March: Violin sonatas, Cello sonatas and Triosonatas (Giorgio Fava and Walter Vestidello)

From 10th to 13st April: Vivaldian vocality: sacred music, chamber singings, operas (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 22nd to 25th May: Vivaldian vocality: sacred music, chamber singings, operas (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 10th to 13th July: Vivaldian vocality: sacred music, chamber singings, operas (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 18th-21st September: Vivaldian vocality: sacred music, chamber singings, operas (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 23rd – 26th October: Basso continuo in Vivaldi compositions (Antonio Frigé)

From 25th – 30th November: Violin concertos and Cello concertos (Giorgio Fava and Walter Vestidello)

 

Two concerts will be organized during the Academy: one on July 13 and one – at the conclusion of the Accademia – on November 30 at Fondazione Giorgio Cini, in Lo Squero Auditorium, on the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore.

 

For each meeting, no more than ten active students will be admitted at the sole discretion of the commission.

The Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi will provide scholarships, which will cover the costs of attendance, for all students admitted.

Students can also stay on the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, at the Residenza of the Vittore Branca International Center for Studies of Italian Civilization (the cost of the accommodation will be paid by the student).

 

Candidates must send to the e-mail address segreteria.vivaldi@cini.it :

– detailed curriculum vitae

– copy of an identity document

– link to a video recording a performance of two pieces by Antonio Vivaldi or other author of the same period.

 

Individual students or pre-established ensembles (1 or 2 violins + basso continuo) will be admitted to the courses.

For strings it is necessary to have a baroque frame (A and E bare gut) and a baroque bow; Diapason 415 Hz.

The meeting on the Basso Continuo is open to all harmonic instruments (keyboards, lutes, theorbos and harps).

At the end of each meeting a certificate of attendance will be issued on request.

The meetings are also open to auditors, upon request and following approval.

 

Per information:

Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi | Fondazione Giorgio Cini
Isola di San Giorgio Maggiore – 30124 Venezia – Italia | T. 39 041 2710250

segreteria.vivaldi@cini.itwww.cini.it

 

Per informazioni sul Centro Internazionale Vittore Branca e i servizi offerti:

http://www.cini.it/centro-branca/la-residenza

 

«Studi Vivaldiani» 17

INDICE

Jóhannes Ágústsson, Joseph Johann Adam of Liechtenstein, Patron of Vivaldi
Joseph Johann Adam del Liechtenstein, patrono di Vivaldi (sommario)
Javier Lupiañez – FabrIzIo AmmettoUna nuova cadenza vivaldiana in un concerto per violino anonimo
A New Vivaldi Cadenza in an Anonymous Violin Concerto (summary)
Michael TalbotAnother Vivaldi Work Falsely Attributed to Galuppi by Iseppo Baldan: A New laetatus sum for Choir and Strings in Dresden
Un’altra composizione di Vivaldi falsamente attribuita a Galuppi da Iseppo Baldan: un nuovo laetatus sum per coro e archi conservato a Dresda (Sommario)

Francesca MenchllI-ButtIni, Aspetti delle opere di Geminiano Giacomelli nel contesto teatrale veneziano fra il 1728 e il 1740
Aspects of the Operas of Geminiano Giacomelli in the Venetian Context between 1728 and 1740 (summary)

Gabriele UggiasCatalogo delle edizioni vivaldiane (1800-1946)
Catalogue of the Editions of Vivaldi’s Music (1800-1946) (summary)

Miscellany (M. talbot)

Miscellanea (M. talbot)

Discographie Vivaldi 2016-2017 (r.-C. travers)

Scarica il volume completo Studi Vivaldiani 17 – 2017

Accademia Vivaldi 2018 Masterclass on the performance practice of the music of Antonio Vivaldi

After the success of Accademia Vivaldi (7-14 July 2017) the Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi is organizing a second edition that is quite different from the previous one.

Instead of a single session there will be 8 meetings (of 3 days each) for young musicians and singers concerning the performance practice of Vivaldi’s compositions. The Accademia will take place at Giorgio Cini Foundation located on San Giorgio Island, Venice.

4 meetings, concerning sacred music, serenate and chamber cantatas and musical dramas, will be held by the soprano Gemma Bertagnoli. 2, concerning violin sonatas and concertos, will be held by the violinist Giorgio Fava. And 2, concerning cello sonatas and concertos, will be held by the cellist Walter Vestidello.

The harpsichordist Antonio Frigé (member of the Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi and one of the responsible for the critical edition made by the institute itself) will accompany the students during all the 8 meetings of the Accademia.

The students will be able to compare themselves to the musicologists that collaborate with the Istituto Vivaldi, continuing the exchange between musicians and musicologists inaugurated in the previous edition of Accademia, to study the various theoretical aspects concerning Vivaldi’s compositions and contexts.


 

Accademia Vivaldi 2018

Masterclass on the performance practice of the music of Antonio Vivaldi

Venice, Fondazione Giorgio Cini, 14th – 17th February; 14th -17th March; 18th – 21st April;

16th – 9th May; 6th – 9th June; 24th – 27th October; 14th – 17th November; 12th – 15th December.

Deadlines for presentation of requests: 5th February; 12th February; 12th March; 16th April; 7th May; 24th September; 15th October; 12th November.

 The Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi organizes eight meetings on the performance practice of the compositions by Antonio Vivaldi, dedicated to young singers and musicians.

Each meeting will take place at Fondazione Giorgio Cini, on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore, in Venice, and will last for three whole days, from 2 pm on the first day (Wednesday) to 1 pm on the fourth day (Saturday).

The teachers are Gemma Bertagnolli (singing), Giorgio Fava (violin) and Walter Vestidello (cello). Harpsichord: Antonio Frigé.

 Gemma Bertagnolli

She began a career very young that soon led her to sing in the main Italian and foreign theaters and festivals. She is considered one of the leading interpreters for Italian baroque music. He is currently a teacher of baroque singing at the Department of Early Music at Conservatorio of Vicenza, at the HFK in Bremen and at the Kusatsu International Academy, Japan.

 Giorgio Fava

Giorgio Fava grew up as violinist in his town, Treviso, with Antonio and Giuliano Carmignola, completing then his studies with M° Corrado Romano in Geneve. In the same Swiss city, at Centre de Musique Ançienne, he studied with Chiara Banchini, getting in 1985 the diploma cum laude in barock violin.

Since 1983 he is first violin of Sonatori de la Gioiosa marca, the internationally known ensemble, who nowadays keeps a role of authority in the interpretation of Venetian music of XVII and XVIII century. He recorded for the principal recording companies (Erato, Warner Classics, Decca, Divox, Opus 111, Arcana, RCA e DHM/Sony etc.) and European radios.

Since the beginning of his carreer, he joins the concertistic and research activity, also the didactic one: he taught since 1981 at Conservatorium of Venice and Castelfranco Veneto; he has been Professor of barock violin at Hochschule für Musik in Trossingen (Germany) since 1994 to 1997; since 2004 he is regular holder of the advanced course of barock/classic violin at Conservatorium A. Steffani in Castelfranco Veneto. In 2001, during the celebrations of Premio Internazionale del Disco Antonio Vivaldi, instituted by Fondazione Giorgio Cini in Venice, he got the special prize of jury.

 

Walter Vestidello

Walter Vestidello attended the Conservatorio di Musica “B. Marcello” in Venice under M. Adriano Vendramelli.
When he was young, he was ‘First cello’ (‘Primo violoncello’) in the Orchestra Filarmonia Veneta; now he covers the same role in the Orchestra della Fenice and in the Orchestra Filarmonica del Teatro di Venezia.
In 1983 he and other musicians from Treviso founded “Sonatori de la Gioiosa Marca”, an ensemble which plays scores from the Baroque-Classic period basing on the original praxis rules and that has performed in several music events in the whole Europe in collaboration with World class soloists for more than 30 years.
From 2007 to 2012 he was ‘First cello’ in the Orchestra Mozart (founded and directed by Claudio Abbado) playing, on request of M. Abbado himself, in chamber music concerts with the soloists of the orchestra.
He taught Baroque cello for Asolo Musica, Conservatorio di Vicenza, Fondazione “G. Cini” in Venice, in Valdagno and Recoaro (Vicenza), Chioggia, San Vito al Tagliamento. He teaches Baroque/Classic cello at the Conservatorio “J. Tomadini” in Udine and in the Academic biennium at the Conservatorio di Castelfranco Veneto where he has coordinated the instrumental activity of ancient music for 10 years.
He has cured the preparation of the cello row in the OGI (Orchestra Giovanile Italiana) for many years and he took part in the activities of the Accademia Filarmonica of Bologna as a teacher for cello and chamber music.
He has collaborated with the Radio della Svizzera Italiana (RSI) for a long time, he played for Rai3, for Austrian radio, for WDR (Germany), for Deutschland Rundfunk of Cologne and for record labels such as “Deutsche Harmonia Mundi”, Opus 111-WDR, Divox Antiqua, RCA, Virgin, Warner Classics (Vivaldi ‘s “Concerti per violoncello” as a soloist)
Now he is a professor of cello at the Conservatorio “A. Steffani” in Castelfranco Veneto (Treviso).

 

Antonio Frigé

Born in Milan, where successfully graduated in organ, organ composition and harpsichord at the Conservatorio G.Verdi, Antonio Frigé  began a deep activity of concerts which led him to play all over Europe and USA for the most prestigious concert societies.

Expecially keen in the literature of the XVII and the XVIII centuries performed on historical instruments, he already recorded several CDs as soloist and as a member of chamber music group.

Since 1982 he plays in duo with Gabriele Cassone and in 1989 he founded the Ensemble “Pian & Forte”.

At the present time he is teaching Basso continuo and chamber music by the “Scuola Civica di Musica Claudio Abbado di Milano” and organist of San Simpliciano Basilica in Milan.

 

Calendar

From 14th to 17th February: Sacred vocal music (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 14th to 17th March: Secular vocal music (cantatas and serenate) (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 18th to 21st April: Violin sonatas (for one or two violins and B.C.) (Giorgio Fava)

From 16th to 19th May: Musical dramas I (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 6th to 9th June: Cello sonatas (Walter Vestidello)

From 24th to 27th October: Musical dramas II (Gemma Bertagnolli)

From 14th to 17th November: Cello concertos (Walter Vestidello)

From 12th to 15th December: Violin concertos (Giorgio Fava)

 

For each meeting, no more than seven active students will be admitted at the sole discretion of the commission.

The Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi will provide scholarships, which will cover the costs of attendance, for all students admitted.

Students can also stay on the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, at the Residenza of Vittore Branca International Center of Italian Civilization, in a single room at a price of 55 euros per night or in a double room at a price of 45 euros per night.

Candidates must send to the e-mail address segreteria.vivaldi@cini.it :

– detailed curriculum vitae

– copy of an identity document

– link to a video recording a performance of two pieces by Antonio Vivaldi or other author of the same period.

Individual students or pre-established ensembles (1 or 2 violins + basso continuo) will be admitted to the courses.

At the end of each meeting a certificate of attendance will be issued on request.

The meetings are also open to auditors, upon request and following approval.

 

Summer School on Performing Vivaldi Accademia Vivaldi

In 2017 the Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi celebrates seventy years since its foundation. For this important anniversary, the Institute is organising the first “Accademia Vivaldi” in collaboration with the Akademie für Alte Musik Bremen of the Hochschule für Künste Bremen.
Entirely devoted to performing and interpreting Vivaldi’s music, the nine-day summer school will enable selected musicians from all over the world to tackle his rich repertoire and especially those compositions by the “Red Priest” that have been the subject of recent publications edited by the Istituto Vivaldi.

An extensive range of courses will be on offer and students will receive both one-to-one and ensemble tuition, during which they will work on Vivaldi’s solo compositions, his chamber music and religious works, as well as his colourful concerti. The course will culminate in a concert performance of Vivaldi’s opera „Teuzzone“, based on a new edition by the Istituto Vivaldi and driven by an intensive exchange of ideas with specialists in the field of Musicology and History of Art.

Concerts have also been planned across the city, at locations, which suit the repertoires: La Pietà, Fondazione Cini, the Biblioteca Marciana, the Scuola Grande di San Rocco.

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From 7 to 11 July 2017, 6.45pm
Final concerts at the Fondazione Giorgio Cini

12 July 2017, 12.00
Concert at the Biblioteca Marciana
Antonio Vivaldi, Repertoire of Chamber Music

13 July 2017, 8.30pm
Concert at the Chiesa di Santa Maria della Pietà
Antonio Vivaldi, Repertoire of Sacred Music

14 July 2017, 8.30pm
Concert at the Scuola Grande di San Rocco, Sala Capitolare
Antonio Vivaldi, “Il Teuzzone” RV 736, poetry by Apostolo Zeno, selection.
Director Thomas Albert

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Books at San Giorgio

The book launch series dedicated to the latest Fondazione Giorgio Cini publications resumes this autumn.

The first date, 11 October, is dedicated to the presentation of the Catalogo della raccolta di miniature della Fondazione Giorgio Cini, edited by Federica Toniolo and Massimo Medica. This book is the result of the work of around fifty expert scholars who made a complete catalogue of the valuable collection of miniatures assembled by Vittorio Cini and presented to the Foundation in 1962.

At the second launch, 17 October, the focus will be on Alessandro Borin’s critical edition of Vivaldi’s Opera VI. This collection of six violin concertos published in Amsterdam in 1719 is evidence of Vivaldi’s recent accomplishments, both in terms of form (the division into three movements), and the emancipation of the solo instrument from its orchestral partners.

The last date, 25 October, will be devoted to Studi Veneziani, the journal edited by the Institute for the History of the Venetian State and Society, whose hefty tomes explore various aspects of the history of Venice. On this occasion the years 2014 and 2015 will be presented: in addition to the usual studies, they include the acts of a one-day conference held at the College de France, Paris, in 2012, in memory of the historian Alberto Tenenti.

 

Antonio Vivaldi. Sonata per violino, violoncello e basso continuo, RV 820

Sonata per violino, violoncello e basso continuo, RV 820

Edited by Federico Maria Sardelli

“Edizione critica delle Opere di Antonio Vivaldi”

Ricordi, Milan, 2015

The sonata RV 820 represents two ‘firsts’: it is the latest work to be added to the Vivaldian canon, and it is also one of the very oldest works by Vivaldi. Having come to light among the numerous anonymous manuscripts preserved in the Sächsische Landesbibliothek – Staatsund Universitätsbibliothek in Dresden, it was attributed to him by Federico Maria Sardelli on the basis of several musical concordances with early works of known authenticity; in addition, a complex web of biographical and paleographical relationships has revealed how this sonata, copied in the hand of the very Young Johann Georg Pisendel, belonged to an initial stock of compositions that Giuseppe Torelli brought with him from Italy after his appointment as Kapellmeister at Ansbach in 1698. In this context, Vivaldi’s sonata finds itself in the company of two manuscripts containing early versions of two concertos that were later included in L’estro armonico. From these facts we gain a new picture that sheds light on Vivaldi’s period of apprenticeship and his debt to Torelli: from a stylistic viewpoint, RV 820 is an unusual type of sonata that remains structured in a late- seventeenth-century way, a work into which Vivaldi injects inventions that are completely new and individual. is is a rare jewel that reveals the work produced by its composer before he became himself.

 

Antonio Vivaldi. Dixit Dominus, RV 594

Dixit Dominus, RV 594

Psalm 109 for two solo sopranos, solo tenor and solo bass, two choirs of four mixed voices, two trumpets, two oboes and strings divided into two ensembles

Reduction for voice and piano

“Edizione critica delle Opere di Antonio Vivaldi”

Ricordi, Milan, 2015

Even though there exists two equally fine settings by Vivaldi of this well-worn psalm text, this one will always remain his ‘great’ Dixit Dominus. Great in every sense: in scale; in fullness of scoring (two cori are employed); in the virtuosity it demands; in complexity of counterpoint (best displayed in the final fugue on a chaconne bass); in grandeur of conception. It appears to be a relatively late work (after the middle of the 1720s), but its circumstances of composition remain unclear. Theories about its genesis have come and gone, but it nevertheless seems clear that it was planned for performance at a major festival in an important Church. The composition is a fascinating mixture of traditional and innovative elements. It marks Vivaldi out as a ‘complete’ composer of sacred music whose imagination always remained fully responsive to the expressive potential of the liturgical text.

The Introduction and Critical Commentary for this vocal score, prepared by Antonio Frigé, is closely based on the Critical Edition by Paul Everett published in 2002.

 

Antonio Vivaldi. Vos invito, barbarae faces. Mottetto per soprano, archi e basso continuo, RV 811

Motet for soprano, strings and basso continuo, RV 811

“Edizione critica delle Opere di Antonio Vivaldi”

Ricordi, Milan, 2009

The motet Vos invito, barbarae faces, RV 811, for soprano, strings and basso continuo is the fi rst composition of this kind by Vivaldi to have been discovered since Vos aurae per montes, RV 623, in the 1960s. Like the second-mentioned work, RV 811 is preserved in the library of the Sacro Convento di S. Francesco, Assisi, but unlike it, the manuscript does not bear the name of its composer. It came to light when two researchers, Valerio Losito and Renato Criscuolo, who were browsing the Assisi collection in the hope of turning up discoveries, recognized the unmistakable stylistic imprint of Vivaldi and notified the Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi. The origin of the motet is uncertain, but there is a good possibility that its original destination, like that of RV 623, was the Basilica del Santo in Padua, with which, as a sister house of the Franciscan order, the Sacro Convento di S. Francesco in Assisi is VARIOUS AUTHORS 31 known to have conducted exchanges and loans of music. Vos invito, barbarae faces is evidently an early work (from c. 1715 or even earlier) and has the conventional structure of Aria–Recitative–Aria–Alleluia. It is an attractive composition that is a fortunate addition to the Vivaldian canon.

Antonio Vivaldi. Serenata a 3, RV 690

Antonio Vivaldi Serenata a 3, RV 690

Critical edition by Alessandro Borin

Edizione critica delle Opere di Antonio Vivaldi

Editore Ricordi, Milan, 2011

The Serenata a tre, RV 690, is the oldest, and in certain respects the most enigmatic of all the Vivaldi serenatas that have come down to us. Its unusual dramaturgy transposes on to an allegorical plane the salient features of the biography of the French Jansenist Jean de Tourreil, who was arrested in Italy on the orders of the Holy Office and imprisoned in Castel Sant’Angelo. A member of the Arcadian Academy and a correspondent of the German philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Tourreil was a fascinating intellectual of modern type, appreciated by the leading figures of the Italian cultural milieu of his day. An examination of the papers relating to his trial – preserved in the archives of the Episcopal Curia in Florence and the Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede in Rome – has made it possible to reconstruct the significant events leading to his condemnation and belated absolution, allowing us at the same time to formulate some new hypotheses concerning the genesis of Vivaldi’s score, the place where it was performed for the first time and the identity of the person who commissioned it.

Il novello Giasone

Libretto: Giacinto Andrea Cicognini – Giovanni Filippo Apolloni

Music: Francesco Cavalli – Alessandro Stradella

Facsimile edition of the score and edition of the librettos by Nicola Usula; introductory essays by Fausta Antonucci, Lorenzo Bianconi and Nicola Usula.

Drammaturgia musicale veneta, 3

Ricordi, Milan, 2013

Having sailed with the Argonauts into the Black Sea, Jason, the Thessalian hero, arrives at Colchis; instead of searching for the Golden Fleece, he has been dating an unknown beauty at night for a year: this is Queen Medea, who finally, using her magical powers, will aid him in his perilous enterprise. Except that, on these remote shores Hypsipyle has also disembarked. She is Queen of Lemnos, whom Jason had seduced and made pregnant at an earlier stage of his voyage: she comes to reclaim her rightful spouse, the father of her children. This is the starting point (more erotic than heroic) of the Giasone of Giacinto Andrea Cicognini and Francesco Cavalli (Venice 1649), the most widely circulated and acclaimed opera of the century, retouched in text and music twenty years after the Venetian premiere, by Giovan Filippo Apolloni and Alessandro Stradella (Rome 1671), newly entitled Il novello Giasone. In anticipation of a critical edition of Cavalli’s original version, “Drammaturgia musicale veneta” now presents in facsimile the score of this Novello Giasone, preserved in Siena. In the first of two introductory essays, Fausta Antonucci and Lorenzo Bianconi reconstruct the bizarre mosaic of classical sources and modern Spanish dramas (Lope de Vega) hiding behind the syncretism of Cicognini’s mocking libretto. In the second essay, Nicola Usula illustrates the rationale for the alterations made to Cavalli’s opera by its Roman revisers, offering as well a synoptic edition of the first libretto of Giasone, printed in 1649 (and hitherto unpublished), and of that published in Rome in 1671.