music.wikisort.org - Composer

Search / Calendar

Mauro Cardi (born July 22, 1955, in Rome, Italy) is an Italian composer.

Mauro Cardi
Mauro Cardi

Biography


Trained at the "Santa Cecilia" Conservatoire of Rome, under the guidance of Irma Ravinale, Gino Marinuzzi jr., Guido Turchi, he graduated in composition, instrumentation for wind orchestra and choral music.[1] In 1982, he received his first international recognition, winning the "Valentino Bucchi Prize"[2][3] with Melos, for soprano and orchestra. Crucial was the encounter with Franco Donatoni, with which he furthered his education at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and the Accademia Musicale Chigiana of Siena.[1][4] In 1984, he attended the Darmstädter Ferienkurse.[1] In the same year his composition Les Masques, Quattro Bagatelle for flute viola and guitar, was awarded the prestigious Gaudeamus Prize in Amsterdam.[5][6][7][8] In 1987, he was selected to represent Italy at the International Rostrum of Composers by UNESCO. In 1988, he won the second prize at the International Competition Gian Francesco Malipiero with In Corde, for orchestra.[9][1] He composed also several works commissioned by institutions and associations such as: RAI, Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Biennale di Venezia, Ravenna Festival, Ville de Genève, Fondazione Malipiero, Centro Studi Armando Gentilucci, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Nuova Consonanza.

While his early works have been influenced by Donatoni, to which he devoted also an extensive analytical study,[10] Mauro Cardi soon developed his individual style,[11][12] focusing his research on "musical forms moulded by timbre and sound intuitions, with unexpectedly expressive moments".[13] His poetics reflects his natural aptitude to contrapuntal writing and his fascination with logic and the symbolic value of numbers, attracted to the playful dimension involved in composing.[14][15][16]

He composed two radio operas commissioned by RAI: in 1994 Temperatura esterna on a text by Michele Mari and, in 1996, La mia puntualità fu un capolavoro on a text by Marco Lodoli. In 1995, on a commission by the Accademia Filarmonica Romana, he composed his first opera, Nessuna Coincidenza, one-act stage action with music.[13] In 1998 BMG Ricordi published the monographic CD Manao Tupupau,[11] containing his major works of the 1990th. From 2000 to 2008, on a commission of the 52nd Biennale di Venezia, he composed Oggetto d'amore,[17] a cycle of seven musical scenes on texts by Pasquale Panella, premiered in Venezia and published in CD format by RAI Trade in 2009, which concludes his long collaboration with Sonia Bergamasco[18] and the Freon Ensemble. In 2019 Mauro Cardi returns to musical theater with Il Diario di Eva, a semi-scenic opera for dancer / actress, soprano and ensemble, on a text freely taken from the homonymous story by Mark Twain (GAMO International Festival, Certosa di Firenze) and in 2021 he composed, on a libretto by Guido Barbieri, the one-act and six chapters opera Le ossa di Cartesio, for actor, three singers and large ensemble, commissioned by Opera InCanto, performed in Terni and Rome for Nuova Consonanza.

Since the 1990s, he has been involved in electroacoustic and computer music, collaborating with the electroacoustic music centres Agon in Milan, Centro Ricerche Musicali in Rome, Istituto Gramma in L'Aquila. In 1995 was chosen by IRCAM[19] for the international stage, in 1997 Manao Tupupao has been selected as a finalist at the 24th Electroacustique Music Competition of Bourges, and in 2009 Alba, for zarb and electronics, was chosen by the International Computer Music Conference of Belfast. In 2001, he joined the composers collective Edison Studio[19] in Rome, one of the most active centres for production of electroacoustic music in Italy, with which he experimented a collective composing practice.[20][21] In 2008, Edison Studio published its first DVD, resulting from the collaboration with the video makers Latini and Di Domenico. In the following years it realized the live soundtracks for the silent movies: Gli ultimi giorni di Pompei (1913) by Eleuterio Rodolfi, Ricatto (Blackmail, 1929) by Alfred Hitchcock, Inferno (1911)[22] by Francesco Bertolini, Giuseppe de Liguoro e Adolfo Padovan (awarded the "Premio speciale AITS per il migliore suono anno 2011"‚[23] by the Associazione Italiana Tecnici del Suono), Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari[24][25] (1919) by Robert Wiene. In 2011 and 2016 these two soundtracks have been published on DVD in 5.1 surround version by the Cineteca di Bologna in the "Il Cinema ritrovato" series. A study has been published on Edison Studio's works: "Il silent film e l'elettronica in relazione intermediale", edited by Marco Maria Gazzano.[26] With Edison Studio, Mauro Cardi participated in the International Computer Music Conference 2002 (Gothenburg) and 2003 (Singapore).

Since 2021 Mauro Cardi has been on the executive committee of Nuova Consonanza from 1988,[27] of which he has been President from 1999 to 2001. Founding member of the "Scuola popolare di musica di Testaccio" (Rome), he has taught Composition at the Conservatories of L'Aquila and Florence and from 2021 at the Conservatory “Santa Cecilia” in Rome. He gives seminars and composition workshops in Italy and abroad.[19]

Mauro Cardi's compositions have been published by: Casa Ricordi, RAI Trade, Curci, Edipan, Ut Orpheus, Semar, Sconfinarte, Taukay; and have been recorded by the labels: Ricordi, RCA, BMG Ariola, Nuova Fonit Cetra, RAI Trade, Edipan, Adda Records, Happy New Ears, Il manifesto, CNI, Taukay.


Works



Musical theatre and movies



Radio dramas



Orchestra



Wind orchestra



Chamber music



A cappella choir



Transcriptions



Discography



Dvd with edison studio



Monographic cd



Works included in cd



Works included in lp



References


  1. "Cardi, Mauro", in AA.VV., Dizionario Enciclopedico della Musica e dei Musicisti, diretto da Alberto Basso, volume Appendice; Utet, Torino, 1990, ISBN 978-88-02-04396-8, p.14
  2. Landa Ketoff, "Una voce per il canto del 900. Conclusa con un concerto la V edizione del premio Valentino Bucchi", La Repubblica, November 27, 1982
  3. E.M., "Ecco i vincitori del Premio Bucchi", L'Avanti, November 25, 1982
  4. "Cardi, Mauro", in AA.VV., Enciclopedia della Musica, diretta da Marco Drago e Andrea Boroli, Istituto Geografico De Agostini, Novara, 1995, ISBN 978-88-415-2055-0, p.184
  5. "Amsterdam: Mauro Cardi vince il Gaudeamus 1984", in Rivista Musicale Italiana, n.4/Ottobre 1984, ERI-Edizioni RAI
  6. R.Hazendonk, "Mauro Cardi goede Gaudeamus winnaar", De Telegraaf, Amsterdam, October 7, 1984
  7. Hein Calis, Frits van der Waa, "Mauro Cardi wint met bescheiden compositie Gaudeamus-prijs", De Volkskrant, Amsterdam, October 7, 1984
  8. https://gaudeamus.nl/en/winners-of-the-gaudeamus-award/ URL Retrieved January 12, 2018
  9. "I premi del G.F. Malipiero", Il Giornale della Musica, N.29, Giugno 1988
  10. Mauro Cardi, "Atono conforta grandi. Uno studio su Argot di Franco Donatoni e di alcune problematiche della composizione algoritmica" (in due parti), in Suono Sonda, Anno 4, N° 7, Febbraio 2009, Anno 4, N° 8, Novembre 2009, Joker, Genova 2009
  11. Mario Pagotto, "Recensione del CD "Manao Tupapau", CD Classica – Marzo 1999
  12. Mario Gamba, "I concetti sonori Modern", Il manifesto, Roma, December 6, 1993
  13. "Cardi, Mauro", in AA.VV., Enciclopedia della musica Garzanti, Milano, 1996, ISBN 978-88-11-50467-2, p.141
  14. Marco Spada, "Compositori Oggi/Incontro con Mauro Cardi: Metto a fuoco le emozioni", l'Unità, Roma, March 17, 1990
  15. Ornella Rota, "L'alternanza di giochi e regole", in Suono, N° 370, Roma, Luglio-Agosto 2004, p.87
  16. Luca Conti, "Mauro Cardi: l'artigianato del comporre", in Idea, Anno XXVI, N.6–7, Roma, Giugno-Luglio 1990, pp.33–39
  17. Carla di Lena, "Liszt per banda e piano", in Il Giornale della Musica, n.287, dicembre 2011, p.6,
  18. Olga D'Alì, "L'amore al tempo di Sonia: a Venezia la Bergamasco porta in scena l'opera sperimentale di Panella e Cardi", in D di Repubblica, October 4, 2008
  19. "Cardi, Mauro", in AA.VV., Dizionario Enciclopedico della Musica e dei Musicisti, diretto da Alberto Basso, volume Appendice 2005; Utet, Torino, 2004, ISBN 978-88-02-06216-7, p.105
  20. Cipriani A., Cifariello Ciardi F., Ceccarelli L., Cardi M., "Collective composition: the case of Edison Studio", in Organised Sound, Cambridge University Press, 2004, 9, pp.261–270, ISSN 1355-7718
  21. Cardi M., Ceccarelli L., Cifariello Ciardi F., Cipriani A., "Nuove tecnologie e composizione collettiva per il cinema muto", in Close Up, Anno X, N°18, Marzo-Giugno 2006, Kaplan, Torino, 2006, ISBN 978-88-89908-01-3, pp.81–102
  22. http://cinestore.cinetecadibologna.it/bookshop/dettaglio/47/ URL Retrieved January 12, 2018
  23. http://www.aits.it/index.php?&lang=it&section=edizioni-premio-aits&Anno=2011 URL consultato il January 12, 2018
  24. http://cinestore.cinetecadibologna.it/bookshop/dettaglio/105 URL consultato il January 12, 2018
  25. David Kim-Boyle – recensione della prima esecuzione di "Das Cabinet des Dr.Caligari" all'ICMC di Singapore, in Computer Music Journal, volume 28, N°2 Summer 2004 – MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
  26. Marco Maria Gazzano (a cura di), Edison Studio. Il Silent Film e l'Elettronica in Relazione Intermediale, Roma, Exorma, 2014, ISBN 978-88-95688-89-3.
  27. Daniela Tortora, Nuova Consonanza – Trent'anni di musica contemporanea in Italia (1959–1988), Libreria Musicale Italiana, Lucca, 1990, ISBN 978-88-7096-019-8,

Bibliography







Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.

Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.

2019-2024
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии