Acclaimed as "a conductor you want to hear again and again,"
Roberto Abbado's crisp, dramatic music-making,
instinctive lyricism and evocative command of varied composers
and styles have made him an esteemed conductor among orchestras
and opera companies today. He is both a sophisticated and energetic
conductor, which combined with superb communicative skills have
made him a favorite among musicians and public alike. A popular
figure in the United States, Mr. Abbado has performed regularly
with such orchestras as the Boston Symphony and Philadelphia Orchestra,
and maintains continuing relationships with the San Francisco,
St. Louis, Atlanta and Houston symphony orchestras, as well as
New York City's Orchestra of St. Luke's. Notably, his most extensive
relationship is currently with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra,
where he is of its first "Artistic Partners", a position
that was recently extended into a second, three-year term.
Highlights of Mr.
Abbado's 2007/2008 season include
a performance series with the Israel Philharmonic, three subscription
weeks with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra with a focus on symphonies
of Franz Schubert, a return to Carnegie Hall with the Orchestra
of St. Luke's featuring Joshua Bell, and appearances with the
San Francisco Symphony, the Atlanta Symphony, the St. Louis Symphony
and the Juilliard Orchestra. In opera, Mr. Abbado conducts the
world premiere of Fabio Vaccchi's Teneke for Teatro alla Scala,
La Clemenza di Tito at Teatro Regio di Torino, and a return
to the Metropolitan Opera for performances of Verdi's
Ernani.
Mr.
Abbado's 06/07 season saw him conduct a three-week
Beethoven festival with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, encompassing
all nine symphonies and five piano concertos (with German pianist
Lars Vogt), with whom he and the SPCO made a European tour in
January 2007. Mr. Abbado also made a second tour of Europe with
the distinguished Chamber Orchestra of Europe with concerts in
London, Cologne, Naples and Turin. Last season also saw Mr. Abbado
conducting the Italian premiere, in Caglieri, of Walter Braunfels
opera
Die Vögel (The Birds), and performances at
Florence‘s Maggio Musicale for Rossini's
Il Barbiere
di Seviglia,. His North American engagements included the
symphony orchestras of Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, San Francisco,
and an appearnace at the Caramoor Festival with the Orchestra
of St. Luke's and at the Grand Teton Music Festival in July. In
Europe he made his debut with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra,
in addition to engagements with the Orquesta Nacional de España
(Madrid), and, in Italy, several programs with the Filarmonica
della Scala (Milan), l'Orchestra del
Maggio
Musicale Fiorentino,
Orchestra Nazionale della RAI (Turin), and the Orchestra del Comunale
di Bologna.
Born into a dynastic musical family, his grandfather was a famous
pedagogue of violin, his father was director of the Milan Conservatory,
and uncle is Claudio Abbado, the famous maestro,
Roberto
Abbado studied with famed conducting teacher Franco Ferrara
at Venice's La Fenice and Rome's Academia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia,
where he was the only student in Accademia history to be invited
to conduct the Orchestra di Santa Cecilia. As Chief Conductor
of the Munich Radio Orchestra (1991-98) he made seven recordings
with the orchestra, and has worked extensively elsewhere in Europe
including the Royal Concertgebouw, Orchestre National de France,
Orchestre de Paris, Dresden Staatskapelle, Gewandhaus Orchester
(Leipzig), NDR Symphony Orchestra (Hamburg), Vienna Symphony,
Swedish Radio Symphony, and Israel Philharmonic Orchestras. In
his native Italy, he has particularly strong relationships with
the great orchestras, and regularly conducts the Filarmonica della
Scala (Milan), Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
(Rome), Orchestra del Maggio Musicale (Florence) and the RAI Orchestra
(Turin).
Mr.
Abbado made this North American concert debut
in 1991 with the Orchestra of St Luke's at the Lincoln Center
in New York. Since then he has returned regularly conducting many
top orchestras. As a gifted accompanist conductor he collaborates
with many of today's most respected soloists including violinists
Joshua Bell, Sarah Chang, Kennedy, Midori, Vadim Repin, Gil Shaham,
Vadim Repin, and pianists Alfred Brendel, Yefim Bronfman, Lang
Lang, Radu Lupu, Andras Schiff, Mitsuko Uchida, Andre Watts, duo
pianists Katia & Marielle Labeque, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, to name
but a small number.
Well known for his work in opera, Mr.
Abbado
has led many new productions and world premieres, including the
Fedora at the Metropolitan Opera (New York),
I Vespri
Siciliani at Vienna Staatsoper,
La Gioconda, and
Lucia di Lammermoor at Teatro alla Scala (Milan),
L'Amour
des Trois Oranges, Aida and
La Traviata for the
Bayerische Staatsoper (Munich),
Simon Boccanegra with
the Teatro Regio di Torino and
Le Comte Ory,
Attila,
and
I Lombardi for the
Maggio
Musicale Fiorentino.
Mr.
Abbado is also well known as a passionate
interpreter of modern and contemporary music. As a natural advocate
for Italian composers, he frequently programs works by Luciano
Berio, Bruno Maderna, and Gofreddo Petrassi, and contemporary
Italians, such as Sylvano Bussotti, Niccoló Castiglioni,
Azio Corghi, Luca Francesconi, Giacomo Manzoni, Salvatore Sciarrino,
and notably Fabio Vacchi, for whom Mr. Abbado conducts the world
premiere of his new opera "Teneke" at Milan's Teatro
alla Scala this season.
Not limited to Italian contemporary music, he also explores the
music of French contemporary composers Pascal Dusapin, Henri Dutilleux
and Olivier Messiaen, Russian Alfred Schnittke, German Hans Werner
Henze and, in part due to his extensive travels among North American
orchestras, an eclectic assortment of this continent's living
composers from Ned Rorem to Christopher Rouse, Steven Stucky and
Charles Wuorinen.
A prolific recording conductor, Mr.
Abbado has
made several recordings for BMG (RCA Red Seal) including award
winning performances of Bellini's
I Capuleti e I Montecchi
and Rossini's
Tancredi. Most recently he recorded a recital
disc of 18th and 19th Century arias with tenor Juan Diego Florez
and the Orchestra di Accademia di Santa Cecilia, titled
The
Rubini Album. Other BMG releases include
Don Pasquale
with Renato Bruson, Eva Mei, Frank Leopardo and Thomas Allen;
Turandot with Eva Marton, Ben Heppner and Margaret Price
and a disc of ballet music from Verdi operas. He has also recorded
the two Liszt Piano Concerti with soloist Gerhard Oppitz; a collection
of great tenor arias with Ben Happner and a CD of opera scenes
with Carol Vaness, both with the Münchner Rundfunkorchester.
For Decca, he has recorded
Verismo Arias with Mirella
Freni. His most recent release for the Stradivarius Label is of
two world premiere recordings by contemporary Italian composer
Luca Francesconi - Cobalt, Scarlet, and Rest. On DVD, Deutsche
Grammophon has recently released
Fedora with Mirella
Freni and Placido Domingo from the Metropolitan Opera New York.