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The new Artistic Director of the Donizetti Opera


Yesterday, 4th December, the board of directors of the Fondazione Teatro Donizetti appointed me as the new artistic director of the Donizetti Opera festival. It is an exceptional acknowledgement of the work I have been doing since 2017 as music director of the festival devoted to Donizetti, and I am deeply grateful to all the members of the board presided over by Giorgio Berta. Besides being a great honour, this double responsibility indicates a clear cut pathway to follow with the determined will to preserve the history and success of the festival, without losing sight of the origins of the historical, musical and cultural patrimony encapsulated in the towering, beloved, immortal name, Gaetano Donizetti. Those who, like me, have known and been studying his scores for a lifetime, are aware that this authentic “reservoir of music” must be transformed into artistic projects equal to the stature of such a treasure, increasing international awareness of Donizetti, supporting and promoting the Research Centre of the Fondazione, envisaging a festival that involves both the inhabitants of Bergamo and a global audience.
I will soon unveil my project. Now is the time to reflect on everything that Donizetti Opera has been during the first ten years of its existence, and on Francesco Micheli’s irrepressible contribution, which has left the bold mark of his creativity. And, immediately afterwards, it will be time to make great plans and take action so that new, exciting ideas can take shape. To do this, I am certain that I can count on the continued support of everyone who has accompanied me over the years in my work as music director.
📷 Gianfranco Rota

UK Tour with the HRSO and pianist Jeneba Kanneh-Mason


The Hungarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and I are about to set off on a tour which fills us with pride, in terms of destination (taking in eight important U.K. cities, including London, over a ten-day stay) and in terms of the programmes. These have been chosen to alternate such cornerstones of Classicism as Beethoven’s Third and Seventh Symphonies with the Chopin and the Rachmaninov concertos no. 2 for piano and orchestra, and the colour-rich, virtuoso symphonism of Kodály’s Dances of GalántaLizst’s Mephisto Waltz and the overture from Glinka’s Ruslan and Ludmila. On such an important tour, we are delighted to have as our guest the young British pianist Jeneba Kanneh-Mason, whose talent continues to electrify and captivate concert audiences and critics alike (and who has recently been signed to Sony Classical). Of course, a tour which is an opportunity both to showcase the orchestra officially, and at the same time to give “our” orchestra a more international dimension, could only begin in Budapest, where we will be giving a concert on 27th November at the Müpa, starting with a tribute to our inspirational Hungarian composer, Kodály, with the Dances of Galánta, then leaping into the core of Romanticism with the Chopin Concerto no. 2 in F minor, in which Jeneba Kanneh-Mason will begin her artistic partnership with the HRSO, moving on to end the concert with the Eroica Symphony. I want to emphasise how important it is for me to start this adventure with the HRSO, on home ground and abroad, by conducting the Dances of Galánta, not only as a tribute to Hungarian composer Kodály, but also with my mind on the fact that the work was originally commissioned to celebrate the eightieth anniversary of the Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra in 1933. The composer paid tribute to the virtuosity of this Hungarian orchestra, composing a piece filled with fiery rhythms and brilliant colours, a masterpiece in which his beloved folk music and masterful orchestration are finely balanced. Everything in this work is a celebration of Kodály’s inexhaustible rhythmic and melodic creativity and of the history of Hungarian music.

📷 Hungarian Radio Art Groups/Attila Vörös