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  • Claudio Abbado's Armenian concert cancelled

    Claudio Abbado's Armenian concert cancelled

    15:59, 9 November, 2013

    YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian concert of legendary
    Italian conductor Claudio Abbado scheduled to be held on December 7
    has been cancelled. The concert by Claudio Abbado and his orchestra
    `Mozart' could become a significant event not for the Republic of
    Armenia alone, but for the entire region as well.

    In a conversation with `Armenpress' the Manager of the Festival Sona
    Hovhannisyan underscored: `I am very sorry to announce that Claudio
    Abbado's concert, which was scheduled to be held within the framework
    of `The Yerevan Prospects' International Festival, has been canceled.
    Maestro will not visit Armenia because of deterioration of his health
    conditions. We wish sound health to the prominent conductor.'

    Claudio Abbado is an Italian conductor. He has served as music
    director of the La Scalaopera house in Milan, principal conductor of
    the London Symphony Orchestra, principal guest conductor of the
    Chicago Symphony Orchestra, music director of the Vienna State Opera,
    and principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic orchestra from 1989
    to 2002. He has been a Senator for life in the Senate of Italy since
    2013.

    Born in Milan, Italy, Abbado is the son of the violinist and composer
    Michelangelo Abbado, who was his first piano teacher, and the brother
    of musician Marcello Abbado. After studying piano, composition, and
    conducting at the Milan Conservatory, at age 16, in 1955 Claudio
    Abbado studied conducting with Hans Swarowsky at the Vienna Academy of
    Music. He also spent time at the Chigiana Academy at Siena.
    In 1958 he won the international Serge Koussevitsky Competition for
    conductors, at the Tanglewood Music Festival, which resulted in a
    number of operatic conducting engagements in Italy, and in 1963 he won
    the Dimitri Mitropoulos Prize for conductors, allowing him to work
    for five months with the New York Philharmonic.

    Abbado made his début at La Scala in his hometown of Milan in 1960 and
    served as its music director from 1968 to 1986, conducting not only
    the traditional Italian repertoire but also presenting a contemporary
    opera each year, as well as a concert series devoted to the works of
    Alban Berg and Modest Mussorgsky. He was instrumental in increasing
    accessibility to the working-class. He also founded the Filarmonica
    della Scala in 1982, for the performance of orchestral repertoire in
    concert.

    He conducted the Vienna Philharmonic for the first time in 1965 in a
    concert at the Salzburg Festival, and became the principal conductor
    in 1971.[2] He served as music director and conductor for the Vienna
    State Opera from 1986 to 1991, with notable productions such as
    Mussorgsky's original Boris Godunov and his seldom-heard
    Khovanshchina, Franz Schubert's Fierrabras, and Gioacchino Rossini's
    Il viaggio a Reims.

    In 1965, he made his British debut at the Halle Orchestra, followed,
    in 1966, by his London Symphony Orchestra debut. He continued to
    conduct on a regular basis with the London Orchestra, until 1979. From
    1979 to 1988 he became the principal conductor of the London
    Symphony Orchestra, and from 1982 to 1986 he was principal guest
    conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. With both orchestras,
    Abbado made a number of recordings for Deutsche Grammophon.

    In 1989, the Berlin Philharmonic elected him as their chief conductor,
    to succeed Herbert von Karajan. In 1998, he announced that he
    would be leaving the Berlin Philharmonic after the expiry of his
    contract in 2002.

    He was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 2000 and the treatment led to
    the removal of a portion of his digestive system.

    In 2004 he returned to conduct the Berlin Philharmonic and performed
    Mahler's Symphony No. 6 in a series of recorded live concerts. The
    resulting CD won Best Orchestral Recording and Record of the Year in
    Gramophone Magazine's 2006 awards. The Orchestra Academy of
    the Berlin Philharmonic established the Claudio Abbado Composition
    Prize in 2006 in his honour.

    After recovering from cancer, he formed the Lucerne Festival Orchestra
    in 2003 and their concerts have been highly acclaimed. He also
    serves as music director of theOrchestra Mozart of Bologna, Italy.

    In September 2007 he announced that he was cancelling all of his
    forthcoming conducting engagements for the "near future" on the advice
    of his physicians but two months later he resumed conducting concerts
    with an engagement in Bologna. In July 2011, aged 78, he declared
    himself to be in good health.

    Abbado's son is the opera director Daniele Abbado. From his
    relationship with the violinist Viktoria Mullova, he is the father of
    her oldest child, Misha. His nephew, Roberto Abbado (the son of his
    brother Marcello, born 1926, who is a composer and pianist), is also a
    conductor.
    Abbado has performed and recorded a wide range of Romantic works, in
    particular Gustav Mahler, whose symphonies he has recorded
    several times. He is also noted for his interpretations of modern
    works by composers such as Arnold Schoenberg, Karlheinz Stockhausen,
    Giacomo Manzoni, Luigi Nono, Bruno Maderna, Thomas Adler, Giovanni
    Sollima, Roberto Carnevale, Franco Donatoni and George
    Benjamin.

    Abbado recalls desiring to become a conductor for the first time as a
    child, when he heard a performance of Claude Debussy's Nocturnes.
    He had the opportunity to attend many orchestral rehearsals in Milan
    led by such conductors as Arturo Toscanini and Wilhelm Furtwängler
    and has told interviewers that Toscanini's tyrannical and sometimes
    abusive manner towards musicians in rehearsal repelled him, and that
    he resolved to behave in the gentler manner of Bruno Walter. Abbado is
    known to exhibit a friendly, understated, and non-confrontational
    manner in rehearsal.

    In 1988, he founded the music festival Wien Modern, which has since
    expanded to include all aspects of contemporary art. This
    interdisciplinary festival takes place each year under his direction.

    Abbado is also well known for his work with young musicians. He is
    founder and music director of the European Union Youth Orchestra
    (1978) and the Gustav Mahler Jugendorchester (1986). He is also a
    frequent guest conductor with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe with
    whom he recorded a cycle of Franz Schubert symphonies to considerable
    acclaim. More recently, he has worked with the Orquesta
    Sinfónica Simón Bolívar of Venezuela.

    He was known for his Germanic orchestral repertory as well as his
    interest in the music of Gioacchino Rossini and Giuseppe Verdi.
    Claudio Abbado has received many awards and recognitions among which
    the Grand cross of the Légion d'honneur, Bundesverdienstkreuz,
    Imperial Prize of Japan, Mahler Medal,Khytera Prize, and honorary
    doctorates from the universities of Ferrara, Cambridge, Aberdeen, and
    Havana.

    In 1973, he won the Mozart Medal awarded by Mozartgemeinde Wien, and
    the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize in 1994.

    He has won 1997 Grammy Award in the Best Small Ensemble Performance
    (with or without conductor) category for "Hindemith:11/9/13
    Kammermusik No. 1 With Finale 1921, Op. 24 No. 1" and 2005 Grammy
    Award in the Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with
    Orchestra) category for "Beethoven: Piano Cons. Nos. 2 & 3" performed
    by Martha Argerich.

    In April 2012, Abbado was voted into the Gramophone Hall of Fame, and
    in May of the same year, he was awarded the conductor prize at
    the Royal Philharmonic Society Music Awards.

    On 30 August 2013, he was appointed to the Italian Senate as a Senator
    for life by President Giorgio Napolitano because of his
    "outstanding cultural achievements


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