Johanna Beisteiner | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | Wiener Neustadt | 20 February 1976
Genres | Classical music, Film music |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, Singer, Arranger |
Instrument(s) | Guitar |
Years active | fl. ca. 1992 - present |
Labels | Gramy Records |
Website | www.beisteiner.com |
Johanna Beisteiner (born 20 February 1976) is an Austrian classical guitarist, singer and arranger. [1] [2]
Johanna Beisteiner received her first guitar lessons at the age of nine at the Josef Matthias Hauer music school in her hometown Wiener Neustadt. In 1992, when only sixteen years of age, she became a student at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna, from where she graduated as a concert guitarist as well as a Doctor of philosophy with a PhD Thesis on Art music in figure skating, synchronized swimming and rhythmic gymnastics. [3]
Johanna Beisteiner is an internationally active guitar soloist and singer, her repertoire contains music from the 15th to the 20th century as well as contemporary classical music. Inter alia she played several world premieres of works by the composers Robert Gulya, Reuben Pace and Eduard Shafransky. Moreover, she worked with known orchestras such as the Budapest Symphony Orchestra, Malta Philharmonic Orchestra, Sochi Symphony Orchestra, Graz Chamber Philharmonic [4] and Budapest Strings Chamber Orchestra, renowned conductors such as Michelle Castelletti, Béla Drahos, Achim Holub [5] and Oleg Soldatov and the Argentine Tango dancer as well as choreographer Rafael Ramirez. In addition to her numerous recordings for Gramy Records, she also appeared in television and radio productions for RAI 3 (Italy), Channel 4 (Russia) and Bartok Radio (Hungary) and recorded soundtracks for movies. [6] In 2012 she composed her first own piece Zemlinsky's Night on themes by Alexander von Zemlinsky.
In 2017 Beisteiner was invited by the Valletta International Baroque Festival to give concerts at Manoel Theatre as well as National Library of Malta with works by Reuben Pace and Johann Sebastian Bach. [7] [8] [9] [10] In 2018 she was selected by Reuben Pace as the interpreter for the world premiere of his Mdina Suite for guitar solo at the Wiener Musikverein. [11] In the season 2018/19 she played her own arrangements of Renaissance works in a program on Pieter Bruegel the Elder at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna and sang in a duet with the actress and singer Katrin Stuflesser. [12]
As part of her solo concerts in recent times, Johanna Beisteiner interprets also art songs (e. g. by Schubert or Mozart) and accompanies herself with specially developed playing techniques. [13] [14]
In October 2022 she went on tour in the USA with performances in New York City, Washington DC and Durham (North Carolina). [15] [16] [17] [18] During this concert tour, she presented her one-woman show Farkas in America ― a combination of recitation, music and flamenco dance ― at the Austrian Cultural Forum New York and at the PSI Theatre of Durham Arts Council. This one-woman show was based on the book of poems Farkas entdeckt Amerika (en: Farkas discovers America) by the Jewish-Austrian comedian Karl Farkas , who ironically described in this work his escape from the Nazi regime via France and Spain to the USA and his life there from 1938-42. Beisteiner also gave a solo concert at the Church of the Epiphany (Washington, D.C.) with songs by Schubert and Mozart and works for solo guitar by Pace and Albéniz.
As part of a cycle by the Maison Heinrich Heine in Paris in honor of Ingeborg Bachmann, Beisteiner opened the series of events with the musical-literary soloprogram Ingeborg Bachmann & Paul Celan on the 50th anniversary of Bachmann's death on October 17, 2023. [19] In November 2023, she toured Canada and the United States with performances at the Centrepointe Theatre in Ottawa, [20] Ottawa Public Library [21] as well as PSI Theatre in Durham. [22] The artist presented her one-woman show Austrian Rarities with works by Beethoven, Mozart and Schubert as well as anecdotes from Ingeborg Bachmann's connections to North America. [23] [24] [25] She also moderated the Book Club of the European Union on the English translation of a book by Ludwig Drahosch, Simonetta's Shadow: A Tale about the Unteachability of the Beautiful (Edition Margarete Tischler, 2022). [26]
Beisteiner plays on classical Spanish guitars made by Paulino Bernabe Senior and Junior.
The Festival of German-Language Literature is a literary event which takes place annually in Klagenfurt, Austria. During this major literary festival which lasts for several days a number of awards are given, the major one being the Ingeborg Bachmann Prize, first awarded in 1977 and one of the most important awards for literature in the German language.
Ferenc Farkas was a Hungarian composer.
Alexander Frey, KM, KStJ, is an American symphony orchestra conductor, virtuoso organist, pianist, harpsichordist and composer. Frey is in great demand as one of the world's most versatile conductors, and enjoys success in the concert hall and opera house, and in the music of Broadway and Hollywood. Leonard Bernstein referred to him as "a wonderful spirit".
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Béla Drahos is a Hungarian conductor and flautist.
Paulino Bernabe Senior was a Spanish luthier.
Róbert Gulya is a Hungarian-British composer. He composes contemporary classical music as well as film scores.
Eduard Shafransky was a Russian classical guitarist and composer.
Carmen on Ice is a 1990 dance film with a choreography for figure skaters made in Germany. The music is based on the opera Carmen by Georges Bizet in an orchestral version arranged especially for this film. In contrast to figure skating movies of former times, Carmen on Ice is a film without spoken dialogue, which is an innovation in the history of figure skating.
Teatro della Concordia, is located in Monte Castello di Vibio, of the Umbria region in Italy. It is the smallest theatre all'italiana in the world.
Gramy Records is a Hungarian record label specializing in jazz, world music and classical music.
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Albert Hubbard is an American synchronized swimmer, choreographer and coach. He is also an aquatic artist as well as historian of the International Academy of Aquatic Art.
The Sochi Symphony Orchestra is an orchestra based in Sochi, Russia.
The Budapest Strings Chamber Orchestra is a professional Hungarian orchestra.
The Graz Chamber Philharmonic is a professional Austrian orchestra.
The Valletta International Baroque Festival is one of the largest music festivals of Malta. It was founded by its present Artistic Director Kenneth Zammit Tabona in 2013. The programmatic focus is on baroque and early music.
Reuben Pace is a Maltese composer.
Martin Wistinghausen is a German composer and bass singer.
Michelle Candotti is an Italian pianist.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)Johanna Beisteiner: Farkas in America in the calendar of events on the website of the Austrian Cultural Forum New York. October 2022.