Thursday, August 18, 2011

About "Overtura Respighiana"

The following is a more detailed overview of Overtura Respighiana:

I composed Overtura Respighiana (Respighiana Overture) in 2008, one year before completing Ottorino Respighi's rediscovered first Violin Concerto - the latter, a commission which I received from Respighi's family descendants and leading archive curator in Italy. 

The work served two purposes: first, an homage not only to Ottorino Respighi but his homage works on Gioacchino Rossini (namely La Boutique Fantasque and Rossiniana); second, a personal thank you to Respighi's family for their permission to honor Respighi's name and entrusting me with the editing and completion of several early Respighi manuscripts for publication (in their first printed editions), premieres and recordings with the orchestra that now bares his name Chamber Orchestra of New York "Ottorino Respighi"

My initial plans for the overture began with a reworking of Respighi's above transcriptions of Rossini's piano music, Les Riens. During the compositional process, I realized a musical connection between the final movement Elegy of my own Sinfonia No. 2 and Respighi's introduction of Pines of Rome. There was a strong resemblance between my variation on an Italian nursery rhyme at the ending of my Sinfonia and Respighi's 'children's theme' at the beginning of his Pines. 

The Overture begins with a reflection on Pines of Rome, citing a reinvention of the principal elements of Rossiniana and the ending of Sinfonia No. 2. My goal for the introduction was to capture Respighi’s orchestral aesthetic at the beginning of Pines, but with entirely different and original motives and melodies. At first listening, the notes may seem quite similar, but they are not. Each orchestral line of the introduction is in fact original, not borrowed out of Pines. Only the choices and placements of instruments remain similar, not the melodies. As a result, this is perhaps the most difficult work I've had to write over recent years. 

Through a series of fanfares, the music leads to a variation of the March from La Boutique Fantasque. Though this section remains the most similar in its reinvention, every single motive has been reworked to achieve varied harmonies – a playful reconstruction. 

A brief sarabande interrupts, which introduces an entirely new Renaissance-styled melody, only inspired from the Valse Lente movement of La Boutique. Looking back, one may hear echoes of Hector Berlioz if not Richard Strauss colors and effects throughout the orchestration. This is the most deeply reflective moment of the Overture. 

Through musical interruptions which serve as reminders of the work’s powerful introduction, we are led to a happy tarantella dance alla Rossini. Using similar ornamentation as Rossini overtures, this Overture ends with a full-fledged Rossini rocket or crescendo effect. The tarantella melody is entirely original, though somewhat inspired by the noted nursery rhyme motif in my own Sinfonia No. 2. The same may be said of the related French horn motif at the beginning of the Overture, also original. The coda is a return of the middle section sarabande, in tutti. 

Overtura Respighiana thereby fuses Gioacchino Rossini’s influence on Ottorino Respighi, with both of their influences on my own orchestral musical language.

If you wish to sample Overtura Respighiana, visit:
http://www.chamberorchestraofnewyork.org/music_director.html

Salvatore Di Vittorio
Music Director, Chamber Orchestra of NY

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Fourth Season 2011-2012 Press Release!

August 12, 2011
For Immediate Release
Contact: Jeffrey James Arts Consulting
516-586-3433 or jamesarts@att.net

Chamber Orchestra of New York Announces 2011-2012 Concert Season
– Fourth Season Repertoire Includes U.S. Premieres

The Chamber Orchestra of New York “Ottorino Respighi” and its Music Director Salvatore Di Vittorio has announced details of their Fourth Season, 2011-2012:

Saturday, December 3 at 8:00 PM - The seasons’ opening concert will be presented at the Church of St. Jean Baptiste, Lexington Avenue at 76th Street in Manhattan.

Featured artists will be The Virgin Consort choral ensemble in the U.S. Premiere of Scarlatti’s oratorio “Il Giardino di Rose” and organist Kyler Brown in Respighi’s Suite for organ and strings.

Other upcoming season highlights include a restoration of Ottorino Respighi’s orchestration of Claudio Monteverdi’s extant Il Lamento di Arianna (from his lost second opera “Arianna”), and other rediscovered early works of Respighi such as his Tre Liriche for mezzo-soprano and orchestra – once championed by Luciano Pavarotti. These works will be showcased alongside staples of the classical repertoire, including: Beeethoven’s Symphony No. 3 “Eroica”, Barber’s Adagio for strings, Grieg’s Holberg Suite, Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on Theme of Paganini, and Mozart’s Missa Brevis in B flat Major.

Venues for 2012 concerts will include Caspary Auditorium of The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue (for the February 3 concert), the Church of St. Jean Baptiste (for the April 21 concert) and Merkin Concert Hall, 129 West 67th Street (for the May 10 concert). Repertoire and soloists for these concerts are TBA.

For season details, including ticket information, please call 646-397-1879 or visit this webpage for updates in the coming weeks.

These concerts celebrate the recent release of the Chamber Orchestra of New York’s internationally acclaimed debut Naxos CDs, which feature Respighi’s rediscovered string works and first Violin Concerto (in A Major) as well as Salvatore Di Vittorio’s homage, Overtura Respighiana.

The all-Respighi album (Naxos 8.572332) was named WQXR “Album of the Week” in New York (June 27, 2011), “Album of the Month” in Italy (for June and July 2011), and listed on Gramophone’s Top 20 Classical Chart for several weeks. The recordings are airing on national and international radio stations, including BBC and RAI Radio, and receiving many wonderful reviews. Much more about these CDs visit our Discography and Reviews webpages.

Chamber Orchestra of New York is a professional orchestra founded in 2006 by composer/conductor Salvatore Di Vittorio. It is composed of leading young professional musicians in the early stages of their careers, and serves as the premier orchestra devoted to the Italian classical repertoire in New York and the U.S. It was established in honor of Ottorino Respighi to present the great orchestral repertoire, with a focus on ancient music and its influences on later composers, including the works of Italian masters and undiscovered (or rarely performed) gems which complement and extend the classical tradition. Following Respighi’s legacy, the Chamber Orchestra of New York fosters a deep respect for antiquity by incorporating into its programming masterpieces of the baroque and classical eras alongside neo-baroque and neo-classical repertoire of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

In collaboration with Honorary Board Members, Respighi's great nieces Elsa and Gloria Pizzoli, archive curator Potito Pedarra, and musicologist Luigi Verdi, Music Director Salvatore di Vittorio and the Chamber Orchestra of New York have established The Respighi Prize Music Competition with the City of Bologna (Respighi's birthplace) and the Ottorino Respighi Publications Series with publisher Edizioni Panastudio of Palermo, Italy. For more about these projects, visit our Respighi Prize Competition and Ottorino Respighi Publications webpages.

For press inquiries or more about the Chamber Orchestra of New York and Salvatore Di Vittorio, please contact Jeffrey James Arts Consulting at 516-586-3433 or jamesarts@att.net

Saturday, August 6, 2011

In Italy: Album of the Month!

In Italy: Album of the Month!  
Following its success on England's Gramophone Classical Chart, our debut all-Respighi Naxos recording (8.572332) has been named "Album of the Month" in Italy by Ducale Music, for June and July of 2011. 

Nationwide Radio Broadcasts in Italy 
Our recordings have been aired on WQXR in New York and BBC in London, and across the U.S. in over 20 cities. Now they are also being featured on leading Italian radio stations, including:

Radio Classica (Milan)
RAI 3 (Turin)
Radio RAI International (Rome)
Toscana Classica (Florence)
Venice Classical Radio (Venice)
...and will soon air on other national and European radio stations!
 


Di Vittorio Album Released on CD
Our second Naxos recording (8.572333) was released July 26th on CD. It features Salvatore Di Vittorio's Respighi homage Overtura Respighiana and his first two Sinfonias.  

More Great Reviews
Read what the critics continue to say on our website, visit Reviews.

Read our most recent Newsletter: http://bit.ly/nyISra