
Graduation recital day for four quite considerable artists who receive their final accolade from the historic Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome

As their remarkable mentor Benedetto Lupo says ‘ each one must now find his own way ‘ .

And what better training than from an artist of a rare humanity and sensibility and how lucky they are to have uncovered with him the first steps of a very difficult career in the music profession .


Four superb recitals justly all awarded very high marks and one even given full marks and honorary mention.




Jaeden Izik-Dzurko already Gold medal winner of Leeds and Montreal decided he wanted to delve deeper in the score and become not just top of the class but an artist that like vintage wine would mature with age. Today I have never seen Jaeden give so much of himself, as did Federico Pische.



I had heard Federico three years ago and today I heard a true artist who listens to himself and has found his own very original way of swimming horizontally in sound .



The sounds he produced in Rameau even had Mauro Buccitti purring as this new Steinway D had proven that the choice of Benedetto Lupo and Andrea Lucchesini really deserved the accolade of the ‘L.L Steinway’ ( the initials of these two remarkable artists )





Pier Carmine Garzillo gave an extraordinarily intelligent performance of the Liszt B minor Sonata . Playing of fearless authority but above all of a musician following scrupulously Liszt’s very precise instructions. One or two additions of an odd bass octave or a double handed trill at the recapitulation turned out not to be arbitrary showmanship but as he told me afterwards were the express wishes of the composer as handed down to a pupil.Thanks to Maestro Garzillo from the class of Francesco Nicolosi, for this very interesting documentation.



Leslie Howard replied to my curiosity like this : ‘Horowitz had similar bad taste. These things were not done with any kind of imprimatur from the composer I think we can be quite sure that Bülow didn’t mess with the score, and even Sauer only made a few suggestions that may be safely discarded!’
I had studied the Sonata with Sidney Harrison ( winning the coveted Liszt Scholarship at the Royal Academy as a teenager ) but had also studied it later with Agosti ( Busoni) and Perlemuter ( Cortot) but had not been aware of this edition until today. What a hive of knowledge is shared amongst these very talented young musicians delving ever deeper into the mystery of Genius.

In fact today we not only heard masterly technicians but much more importantly master musicians of integrity and humility in front of the scores handed down to us by genial composers. We live in an age of quantity rather than quality. Of showmanship rather than interpretation. Here at the Accademia there is an air of discovery of delving deeply into the score to discover the real meaning behind the notes as bequeathed to us. Andras Schiff simply exclaims that a lifetime is not enough to discover the real meaning in the repertoire he chooses to dedicate himself to.
Benedetto Lupo points these young artists on the path of a voyage of discovery that will last a lifetime. The principles of humility and integrity of a great interpreter :’ Je sens , je joue, je trasmet ‘ was the title of an interview in Le Monde de la Musique and together with Rubinstein’s famous plea it underlines the principles of a true artist. https://youtu.be/gex0sOR7XZ0.
The world of an artist is unique where music can speak louder than words even if Senancour came close with ‘Obermann’, as Liszt appreciated. But it needs a special key to unlock the fantasy, intelligence and dedication that Benedetto has in his hands ready to share with his young aspiring colleagues.
‘What would I? What am I? What must I ask of Nature?….Every cause is invisible, every aim deceptive; every form changes, all continuance comes to an end….I feel, I exist simply to be the prey of untamable desires, to be besotted by the spell of a fantastic world, and to stand aghast at its dazzling falsity.‘ Senancour.




Nowhere more was this evident than in the eclectic choice of Federico Manca with Berg, Vine and Prokofiev Sonatas . Berg’s knotty twine given a path that illuminated and intensified a masterpiece so often allowed to meander instead of showing its real face . The set piece by Stojanov, a Bulgarian composer almost unknown, was a work that lent itself to being a preface to Prokofiev’s Eighth sonata that is a great song to humanity and the last of the War Trilogy of Sonatas .

In 1937, he began teaching and later became professor of music theory courses at the National Academy of Music (Bulgaria) . Stoyanov raised the level of music theory teaching in Bulgaria. His students included Todor Popov ,Dmitar Petkov,Stefan Remenkov,Alexander Tekeliev ,Ivan Marinov and others
His works include Three concertos for piano and orchestra (1942, 1953, 1966); Concerto for Violin and Orchestra; Concerto for Cello and Orchestra; Concertino for violin
Two symphonies; symphonic suite grotesque Bai Ganyo; Festival Overture; symphonic poem Song of Blood; Rhapsody for symphony orchestra
Operas:Kingdom of Women, Salambo, Sly Peter 1958
Ballet Pope Joanna
Cantatas
Songs
Veselin Stojanov (1902 – 1969), Bulgarian composer, pianist, conductor, public figure.
Veselin Stoyanov is son of Anastas Stoyanov and brother of Andrey Stoyanov. He belongs to the second generation of Bulgarian composers. He was among the founders of the Contemporary Music Society in 1933 (which later became the Union of Bulgarian Composers). He graduated from the State Academy of Music in 1926 majoring in Piano under his brother. The same year he enrolled at the Vienna Hochschule fьr Musik studying Piano with Professor V. Ebenstein and Composition with Professor F. Schmidt. He took private classes of Piano with P. de Kohn and Orchestration with Wunderer. Upon his return to Bulgaria he taught Piano and Theory of Music (1931-37). He performed as a pianist and conductor. In 1937 he joined the staff of the State Academy of Music teaching music theory subjects. In 1945 he was appointed Professor of Composition and Music Forms. He also was elected Dean of the Music Theory Faculty (1952) and Rector of the State Academy of Music (1956-1962). He served as director of the Sofia Opera (1953-54).
He composed in a variety of genres with an inclination to instrumental large-scale forces and through-composed forms sustained by leitmotif technique, rich harmony and sumptuous even exotically sounding orchestration. A national stamp to this style was provided by use of modal colouring or irregular time beats characteristic for the Bulgarian traditional music but without quoting. He composed three operas, one ballet; symphony and chamber music; three concertos for piano and orchestra; choral, solo and mass songs; film music, etc. A few of his works won recognition as bright examples of Bulgarian music and were internationally acclaimed. Among them one might mention his grotesque suite Bay Ganyu after Aleko Konstantinov (1941), his Rhapsody (1956) or his Festival Overture (1959); the instrumental concertos, his Piano Sonata and Piano Suite composed in the 1930s, his Sonata for violin and piano, the String Quartets, etc.
He wrote and published articles on music aesthetics, music forms and contemporary Bulgarian music.
The liric NOCTURNO is middle part from the cycle “Three pieces for piano” (1956). Magnificent, bright music language, near to folk song melodic blilliance, expressive and rich harmony and colorful orchestration. The raised poetic liric is combined with irresistible folk dancing.















































































































































