歌手资料
Orchestra del Teatro Regio di Parma
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Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra’s historical roots go back many centuries. Already in the Renaissance period, refined vocal and instrumental Choirs and brilliant Companies of violins accompanied the musical life of the Dukedom, while between the 17th and 18th centuries more sizable ensembles provided support for the theatrical dynamism that became characteristic of the city. Between the end of the 1700s and the early decades of the 1800s, as a political and cultural crossroads between Paris and Vienna, Parma enjoyed one of the outstanding periods of its history, becoming a veritable workshop for the development of music, and in particular, of the role of the orchestra. The culminating moment, without doubt, is Maria Luigia’s decision to appoint one of the most celebrated musicians of the time, Niccolт Paganini, as musical director of the Ducal Orchestra. With him, and thanks to his success, the Parma orchestra became “the best in Italy”. \n\nFrom that moment, and for the whole of the 19th and 20th centuries, instrumentalists from Parma formed the backbone of the best Italian orchestras. One example that bears this out this affirmation is the orchestra formed and directed by Toscanini for his grand tours in the early 1920s, almost a fifth of which was composed of musicians from Parma. For many decades after that, the Orchestra accompanied those extraordinary operatic performers that contributed in furthering the prestige of the Teatro Regio in the world. \n\nIn the wake of this tradition, the Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra, operating as a stable ensemble, made its debut in 2000 with Wagner’s Lohengrin and Meyerbeer’s Dinorah, receiving critical and public acclaim. Since 2002, it has been involved in all the operatic and concert productions put on by the Teatro Regio di Parma and the Festival Verdi, tackling the great operatic, symphonic and sacred repertoire under the direction of some of the leading conductors on the international music scene.\n\nThe foreign tours, in December 2001 with the Verona Arena Foundation Choir for the celebrations of the Verdi Centenary at Annecy and at the Auditorium National in Lyon, in July 2002 with Nabucco at the Arena of Nîmes, and later on in may 2009 at Hessisches Staatstheater for the Maifestspiele, the oldest international German festival after Bayreuth one; in September 2003 in South Korea with Aida at the Jamshil Olympic Stadium, and in September 2004 with Rossini’s Stabat Mater in Marseilles for the Festival de Musique at Saint Victor, were a great success.\n\nAmong visits to other continents, in November 2005 the participation in the much-acclaimed Teatro Regio di Parma Rigoletto production at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City; in 2006 and 2007 the tournеe in India in New Delhi, in the ancient Purana Qila fortress, open on that occasion in order to welcome a music event for the very first time in its history, and in 2006 in Mumbai. Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra performed many times in Bilbao for the Tutto Verdi project playing Aida, Falstaff, Il Corsaro; in March 2008 Rigoletto is acclaimed in Hong Kong’s Cultural Center.\n\nA great and important collaboration has been open in June 2009 with Beijing National Center for the Performing Arts in order to link China’s will to meet western cultures and the best Italian operatic tradition. This collaboration led to the Italian and Chinese co-production of Pierluigi Samaritani’s Rigoletto A profitable partnership has developed further to meeting Bruno Bartoletti, culminating in the realization of an important project dedicated to Benjamin Britten, with the staging of The Turn of the Screw and the performance of the War Requiem. Prestigious international artists as Riccardo Muti and Lorin Maazel conducted Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra in Giuseppe Verdi’s Messa da Requiem.\n\nFrom the 1st January 2011 Andrea Battistoni has been appointed First Guest Conductor and from the 1st January 2009 the great Russian conductor Yuri Temirkanov accepted to become Teatro Regio di Parma Musical Director, to join the artistic project which will lead to Giuseppe Verdi’s 200th birth anniversary.\n\n
Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra’s historical roots go back many centuries. Already in the Renaissance period, refined vocal and instrumental Choirs and brilliant Companies of violins accompanied the musical life of the Dukedom, while between the 17th and 18th centuries more sizable ensembles provided support for the theatrical dynamism that became characteristic of the city. Between the end of the 1700s and the early decades of the 1800s, as a political and cultural crossroads between Paris and Vienna, Parma enjoyed one of the outstanding periods of its history, becoming a veritable workshop for the development of music, and in particular, of the role of the orchestra. The culminating moment, without doubt, is Maria Luigia’s decision to appoint one of the most celebrated musicians of the time, Niccolт Paganini, as musical director of the Ducal Orchestra. With him, and thanks to his success, the Parma orchestra became “the best in Italy”. \n\nFrom that moment, and for the whole of the 19th and 20th centuries, instrumentalists from Parma formed the backbone of the best Italian orchestras. One example that bears this out this affirmation is the orchestra formed and directed by Toscanini for his grand tours in the early 1920s, almost a fifth of which was composed of musicians from Parma. For many decades after that, the Orchestra accompanied those extraordinary operatic performers that contributed in furthering the prestige of the Teatro Regio in the world. \n\nIn the wake of this tradition, the Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra, operating as a stable ensemble, made its debut in 2000 with Wagner’s Lohengrin and Meyerbeer’s Dinorah, receiving critical and public acclaim. Since 2002, it has been involved in all the operatic and concert productions put on by the Teatro Regio di Parma and the Festival Verdi, tackling the great operatic, symphonic and sacred repertoire under the direction of some of the leading conductors on the international music scene.\n\nThe foreign tours, in December 2001 with the Verona Arena Foundation Choir for the celebrations of the Verdi Centenary at Annecy and at the Auditorium National in Lyon, in July 2002 with Nabucco at the Arena of Nîmes, and later on in may 2009 at Hessisches Staatstheater for the Maifestspiele, the oldest international German festival after Bayreuth one; in September 2003 in South Korea with Aida at the Jamshil Olympic Stadium, and in September 2004 with Rossini’s Stabat Mater in Marseilles for the Festival de Musique at Saint Victor, were a great success.\n\nAmong visits to other continents, in November 2005 the participation in the much-acclaimed Teatro Regio di Parma Rigoletto production at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City; in 2006 and 2007 the tournеe in India in New Delhi, in the ancient Purana Qila fortress, open on that occasion in order to welcome a music event for the very first time in its history, and in 2006 in Mumbai. Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra performed many times in Bilbao for the Tutto Verdi project playing Aida, Falstaff, Il Corsaro; in March 2008 Rigoletto is acclaimed in Hong Kong’s Cultural Center.\n\nA great and important collaboration has been open in June 2009 with Beijing National Center for the Performing Arts in order to link China’s will to meet western cultures and the best Italian operatic tradition. This collaboration led to the Italian and Chinese co-production of Pierluigi Samaritani’s Rigoletto A profitable partnership has developed further to meeting Bruno Bartoletti, culminating in the realization of an important project dedicated to Benjamin Britten, with the staging of The Turn of the Screw and the performance of the War Requiem. Prestigious international artists as Riccardo Muti and Lorin Maazel conducted Teatro Regio di Parma Orchestra in Giuseppe Verdi’s Messa da Requiem.\n\nFrom the 1st January 2011 Andrea Battistoni has been appointed First Guest Conductor and from the 1st January 2009 the great Russian conductor Yuri Temirkanov accepted to become Teatro Regio di Parma Musical Director, to join the artistic project which will lead to Giuseppe Verdi’s 200th birth anniversary.\n\n