“To stop the flow of music would be like the stopping of time itself, incredible and inconceivable.” — Aaron Copland

Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710-1736) Stabat Mater
Alexandra Ivchenko – Soprano
Giulia Medicina – Mezzosoprano
Bruno Medicina – Organo

Fundatia Inocenti – Romanian Children’s Relief, in collaboration with the Italian Institute of Culture, is pleased to invite you to a special Bruno Medicina Piano Recital, to benefit Inocenti children and programs. The evening will include works by J. S. Bach, W. A. Mozart, F. Liszt and G. Gershwin.
Yeah, a gift can change your life… 🙂
I don’t like too much Elton John, but this emotionally overloaded ad is really amazing…
Well, as a classical pianist, I’m not too skilled in this kind of stuff, so it was just a try after the “real” recital. Btw, a lot of fun! 🙂
Saturday, September 21st, 2018 Oratorio di S.Erasmo, Sori – Italy
Pianist: Bruno Medicina
Oratorio di S. Erasmo, Sori (Genoa, Italy)
W.A. Mozart – Requiem K626 for Soli, Choir and Piano 4 hands (arr. C. Czerny)
Sandra Terrile – Soprano
Elisa Lagutaine – Contralto
Daniele Buttafava – Tenore
Andrea Lanzola – Baritono
Coro Polifonico Luigi Porro – Genova
Piano: Sara Marchetti – Bruno Medicina
Conductor: Marco Simoncini

“I would say that anyone who acts without paying attention to what he is doing is wasting his life. I’d go as far as to say that life is denied by lack of attention, whether it be to cleaning windows or trying to write a masterpiece.” Nadia Boulanger *
Have you ever heard “Besame mucho”? Of course you’ve heard it: it’s one of the most famous songs in the world and, apparently, the most recorded of all time. And of course you know the refrain words: “Besame, besame mucho, como si fuera esta noche la ultima vez… ” and consequently the feeling of sensuality and passion that they suggest: indeed, how would you make love with someone you like, if you know that it might be the last time?
The work of a sculptor has always seemed to me extremely fascinating. Think for a moment: you have in front of you a block of marble and you begin to carve with a chisel. Little by little, from the stone a “form” begins to appear, the stone begins to have a “meaning”, and this form and meaning represent the materialization of an idea that was in your mind as well as the manifestation in the physical plane of your creative power. It’s something that makes us similar to the gods.
This process can appear trivial, but there are some aspects that deserve to be explored: the block of marble is a space of infinite potentiality, it contains an infinite number of statues of which only one will materialize. It is interesting to note that to sculpt a statue is a process that does not involve a real “creation”, as the statue is ALREADY inside the stone, but it implies the elimination of all that is unnecessary and prevents the statue to come to light and to manifest.
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- Performance Coaching and Promotion for Musicians and High Achievers
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