Anthony & Joseph Paratore | |
---|---|
Education | Juilliard School |
Occupation | Piano duo |
Awards | ARD International Music Competition 1974 |
Anthony & Joseph Paratore is an internationally known classical piano duo, formed by the brothers Anthony Paratore (born 17 June 1944) and Joseph Paratore (born 19 March 1948). The pianists have performed and recorded most of the classical repertoire for two pianos and four-hand piano, including works with orchestra and arrangements of works for orchestra. In the field of jazz they have collaborated with Dave Brubeck.
Anthony and Joseph Paratore were born in Boston in a musical family of Italian origin. [1] They studied on scholarships at both Boston University and the Juilliard School, with Rosina Lhévinne. [2] Anthony graduated from Boston University's School of Music in 1966, Joseph in 1970. [3] Each began performing as a soloist. Joseph had his debut with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, aged 17. Anthony toured South America. [2] Their teacher at Juilliard had urged them to play as a duo, because she had observed that they "gave the impression of breathing together". [1]
In 1974, they won first prize at the ARD International Music Competition, [1] [2] as the first piano duo to do so. [3]
In 1987, they premiered Alban Berg's transcription of Arnold Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony, Op. 9, which had been "considered too difficult" when it was written. They recorded it along with Berg's transcriptions of his own string quartet, Op. 3. [4]
In 1988, they played one of the 19 concerts of the first season of the Rheingau Musik Festival at Schloss Johannisberg. On 27 August they played the Sonata for Two Pianos in F minor, Op. 34b, by Johannes Brahms, an earlier version of his Piano Quintet, Claude Debussy's arrangement of his Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune , and arrangements from George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess and his Rhapsody in Blue . Among the encores was their adaption of the finale from The Carnival of the Animals , [5] to be repeated on many occasions in the hall as the favourite of Tatiana von Metternich.
In 1992, a scholarship in their name, the Paratore Brothers Scholarship Fund, was established at Boston University for highly gifted music students. [2] [3]
The duo returned to the Rheingau Musik festival almost every year, in 2001 with a program of mainly pieces which composers arranged for two pianos, Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring , Ravel's Rapsodie espagnole and Debussy's Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, concluding with Darius Milhaud's Scaramouche. [6] They recorded works by their friend Dave Brubeck in 2001, the ballet suite Points on Jazz and Four By Four, originally called Centennial Suite, when it was composed in 1949/50. [7] A concert in 2004 juxtaposed works by Brubeck with music by Johann Sebastian Bach, recorded live. With the Bach Collegium Munich, conducted by Russell Gloyd, they played Bach's Concerto, BWV 1060, and Brubeck's Points on Jazz in a version with orchestra. For the second half of the concert the Dave Brubeck Quartet joined for works such as Brandenburg Gate, alluding to the Brandenburg Concertos. [8]
In 2012, they were among the Wegbegleiter (Companions along the way) of the Rheingau Musik Festival in its 25th anniversary season, artists who had appeared regularly from the beginning. [9] [10] They performed in the Kurhaus Wiesbaden in a Kindersinfoniekonzert (symphony concert for children) Ravel's Ma mère l'oye and Der Karneval der Tiere by Camille Saint-Saëns, with the Dresdner Kapellsolisten and Rufus Beck narrating the text by Loriot. [2] [11]
They appeared on the NBC shows Today Show and The Tonight Show, and they were featured on a PBS show The Paratores: Two Brothers, Four Hands. [3]
Manfred Trojahn composed on their commission in 1982 La folia / Musik für zwei Klaviere, premiered at the 32nd Berliner Festwochen on 16 September 1982. [12] Wolfgang Rihm composed for them in 1985 Maske (Mask) for two pianos, premiered in Badenweiler on 8 March 1986. [13] Michael Schelle composed his Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra for the Paratores in 1986 on commission from three orchestras; the premiere was by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in January 1987. On their commission, William Bolcom wrote his Sonata for Two Pianos that they premiered in 1994. [14] Dave Brubeck dedicated to them his "Points on Jazz", and entrusted his original two-piano music to them.
Bryan Miller wrote in the Chicago Tribune in 1994: "... they are remarkably well-matched and technically dazzling in their tandem playing". [14] Makiko Yamashita observed in a concert in Sacramento in 2010: "Joseph with long and curly hair often played in an expressive and explosive style. Anthony was more reserved with a refined and controlled presence, gave a serious yet thoughtful and gentle performance." [15]
Itzhak Perlman is an Israeli-American violinist. He has performed worldwide and throughout the United States, in venues that have included a state dinner for Elizabeth II at the White House in 2007, and at the 2009 inauguration of Barack Obama. He has conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Westchester Philharmonic. In 2015, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Perlman has won 16 Grammy Awards, including a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, and four Emmy Awards.
Dame Julia Myra Hess, was an English pianist best known for her performances of the works of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Schumann, and Brahms.
Joanna Clare MacGregor is a British concert pianist, conductor, composer, and festival curator. She is Head of Piano at the Royal Academy of Music and a professor of the University of London. She was artistic director of the International Summer School & Festival at Dartington Hall from 2015 to 2019.
David Geringas is a Lithuanian cellist and conductor who studied under Mstislav Rostropovich. In 1970 he won the gold medal at the International Tchaikovsky Competition. He also plays the baryton, a rare instrument associated with music of Joseph Haydn.
Goran Krivokapić is a Montenegrin classical guitarist.
Genova & Dimitrov is a Bulgarian piano duo. The duo consists of Aglika Genova and Liuben Dimitrov. They appear at two pianos and at one piano four-handed with recital programmes, as well as with orchestras.
Georg Enoch Robert Prosper Philipp Franz Karl Theodor Maria Heinrich Johannes Luitpold Hartmann Gundeloh Freiherr von und zu Guttenberg was a German conductor. He also owned the large winery estate Weingut Reichsrat von Buhl. He founded musical ensembles for performances of sacred choral works, and the Herrenchiemsee Festival. In 1975, he co-founded the BUND, a German organization dedicated to protecting the natural environment.
Sebastian Manz is a German clarinetist. He is solo clarinetist in the SWR Symphonieorchester, international soloist and chamber musician. He is also active as an arranger and composer.
Klaus Mertens is a German bass and bass-baritone singer who is known especially for his interpretation of the complete works of Johann Sebastian Bach for bass voice.
Ruth Ziesak is a German soprano in opera and concert.
The Rheingau Musik Festival (RMF) is an international summer music festival in Germany, founded in 1987. It is mostly for classical music, but includes other genres. Concerts take place at culturally important locations, such as Eberbach Abbey and Schloss Johannisberg, in the wine-growing Rheingau region between Wiesbaden and Lorch.
Christian Gerhaher is a German baritone and bass singer in opera and concert, particularly known as a Lieder singer.
Dorothee Mields is a German soprano concert singer of Baroque and contemporary music.
Werner Güra is a German classical tenor in opera, concert and Lied, also an academic teacher in Zurich.
Gabriel Dessauer is a German cantor, concert organist, and academic teacher. After studies with Diethard Hellmann and Franz Lehrndorfer, he was responsible for the church music at St. Bonifatius, Wiesbaden from 1981 to 2021, conducting the Chor von St. Bonifatius until 2018. Besides normal church services, he conducted them in regular masses with soloists and orchestra for Christmas and Easter and a yearly concert. In 1995 he prepared the choir for a memorial concert commemorating the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II, performing Britten's War Requiem with choirs from countries involved in the war, and concerts in Wiesbaden and Macon, Georgia. Programs of choral concerts included Hermann Suter's Le Laudi in 1998, the German premiere of Rutter's Mass of the Children in 2004, and the world premiere of Colin Mawby's Bonifatiusmess in 2012 which he had commissioned for the choir's 150th anniversary. The concert of 2008, Vivaldi's Gloria and Haydn's Nelson Mass, was also performed at San Paolo dentro le Mura in Rome.
Rudi Spring is a German composer of classical music, pianist and academic. He is known for vocal compositions on texts by poets and his own, and for chamber music such as his three Chamber Symphonies.
Michael Herrmann is a German culture and music administrator. He founded the Rheingau Musik Festival in 1987 and is its Artistic Director and Chief Executive Officer. He also runs a concert agency in the Frankfurt Alte Oper, the Pro Arte Konzertdirektion, and started an agency for concerts in the Kurhaus Wiesbaden in 2019, Wiesbaden Musik, beginning with a concert on his 75th birthday.
Georg Adam Joseph Schmitt was a German/Dutch composer, conductor, music director, publisher, music theorist and pedagogue. He is also known as "The Dutch Haydn".
Babette Haag is a German percussionist, who specialises in Marimba playing.
Shirley Brill is an Israeli clarinetist living in Germany.