Aldo Ferraresi Explained

Aldo Ferraresi
Birth Name:Aldo Ferraresi
Birth Date:1902 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Ferrara
Death Place:Sanremo
Instrument:Camillo Camilli
Alessandro Gagliano
Genre:Classical
Occupation:violinist, pedagogue
Years Active:1923 to 1977

Aldo Ferraresi (Ferrara, 14 May 1902 – San Remo, 29 June 1978) was a celebrated Italian concert violinist and violin pedagogue.

Life and career

Ferraresi was born in Ferrara, the son of Augusto Ferraresi (1868-1939), an artillery marshal and mandolin player, and Marcella Jesi. His mother was of Jewish origin.[1] At the age of five he began his studies at the Frescobaldi Institute of Music in Ferrara with Federico Barera and Umberto Supino. When he was 12, he was admitted to the Parma Conservatory. His teacher there, Mario Corti, also accompanied him to Rome where he received a degree in violin from the Accademia di Santa Cecilia three years later. Upon suggestions from Jan Kubelik, he went to Eugène Ysaÿe, who considered him one of his best pupils.Starting from 1923 he was leader of "Aldo Ferraresi Chamber Orchestra" where, together with Marcello Cortopassi and professors of the "Rome Augusteo Orchestra", he played at Gran Caffé Margherita in Viareggio (Lucca).He went on to perform in concert halls throughout Europe and the United States including La Scala in Milan, the Royal Festival Hall in London. In addition to his solo concert work, he was also first violin in the Quartet of San Remo and concertmaster at the Symphonic Orchestra of San Remo, as well at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples.As teacher, he held the violin class at Music Conservatory "N.Piccinni" in Bari from October 1967 till 1973, when Nino Rota was the director.Among his pupils we can remember Uto Ughi that studied with him privately in Naples for 7 years.Aldo Ferraresi died in Sanremo on 29 June 1978. In May 2002, the 100th anniversary of his birth was marked by an exhibition and seminars in Ferrara and concerts in his honour in Ferrara at the Teatro Comunale.Ferraresi played on many precious violins, among of them are the "King George" Stradivarius and the "Cannone" Guarneri of Paganini. His favourite instruments were a Camillo Camilli and an Alessandro Gagliano.

Family

Among the six brothers are Prospero Ferraresi (1908-1972), pianist and his accompanist from the 1920s to the 1940s, Sesto (Sexten) Ferraresi (1915-1984), dealer in musical instruments that lived in Berlin, and the younger, that was also his pupil, Cesare Ferraresi (Ferrara, 12 October 1918 – Milano, 9 January 1981) who was a renowned soloist, concertmaster at RAI Orchestra in Milano and member of "Trio di Milano" (with pianist Bruno Canino and cellist Rocco Filippini). From his marriage with Italia (Ione) Pecori, Aldo Ferraresi had two sons, both musicians, Marcello Ferraresi (San Remo, 20 April 1942 – Naples, 25 December 2006) an appreciated tenor, pupil of Mario del Monaco and the pianist Augusto Ferraresi, that we can see in a RAI video accompanying his father in Paganini recital ("Nel cor più non-mi sento"; "Adagio e Tamburino"; "Le Streghe"; "Sonatina in E minor" (recording: 4 January 1966; broadcast: 28 October 1966 RAI TV1).[2]

Notable performances

Recordings

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SOUVENIR OF ALDO FERRARESI, the great Italian violinist born in Ferrara on May 14th,1902 and dead in San Remo on June 28th,1978 . 19 March 2009 . https://archive.today/20120729133041/http://www.cremona.u-net.com/aldo.htm . 29 July 2012 . dead .
  2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rJyiji7Qzs Niccolò Paganini "Le Streghe" - Aldo Ferraresi - RAI 1966
  3. http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2007/Mar07/Ferraresi_JW.htm Music Web International | Aldo Ferraresi – il Gigli del violino: The Great Italian Radio Recordings 9CD box, Review by Jonathan Woolf, March 2007
  4. http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2017/Jan/Ferraresi_boxset_RH001.htm Music Web International | Review by Jonathan Woolf, January 2017
  5. http://www.resmusica.com/2017/05/25/aldo-ferraresi-maitre-oublie-du-violon/ ResMusica | Review by Maciej Chiżyński, 25 May 2017 "Clef d'Or RESMUSICA 2017"
  6. https://www.rhineclassics.com/pages/001-reviews Rhine Classics RH-001| complete reviews