Paolo Beschi, a life in music

By Emilia Campagna - October 27, 2022
Paolo Beschi, tutor at Montecastelli chamber music residency, speaks about his musical experience, how he fell in love with period cello and how music fullfills his life

The new Theresia project is a chamber music residency involving a group of string and woodwind players: set in Montecastelli, the residency has a prestigious tutor, the cellist Paolo Beschi. We asked him to tell us about his experience and his relationship with music.

Maestro Paolo Beschi, you studied with Franco Rossi, cellist of the renowned Quartetto Italiano and started your musical career as a modern cellist: initially, you were also particularly active as a contemporary music performer. How did it come that you switched to the period instrument?

It is always very interesting to know how one of us musicians discovered the period instrument and fell in love with it, because these are quite always stories of enlightenment. And so it was for me, a sort of conversion, even though the path to get there was somehow unexpected. As you said, I worked a lot with an ensemble of contemporary music, and had the luck to play with soprano Cathy Berberian: she was Luciano Berios’s wife and an excellent performer of contemporary music. But she was also very active in the field of historically informed performance practice: she had the perfect voice for baroque repertoire and worked with Harnoncourt. And as an ensemble, we used to combine for example Monteverdi’s Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda and Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire. I was really young, and she was a lovely person, very keen on sharing her experience: talking a lot with her, I started to reckon that there was something that attracted me to baroque music. Then, one night I went to listen to a concert by cellist Anner Bijlsma, and that was the moment of my enlightenment, of my total conversion. It was as if in a dark room, all the windows were opened at the same time and the light came in: I couldn’t ignore that, and I started to study at Scuola Civica di Milano with Robert Gini and to take classes with Anner Bijlsma.

“I went to listen to a concert by cellist Anner Bijlsma, and it was as if in a dark room, all the windows were opened at the same time and the light came in”

In your career as a period cellist, you were very active in the chamber music field: with “La Gaia Scienza” ensemble, in duo with your wife, the pianist Federica Valli, you performed even romantic repertoire, like Brahms’ and Schubert’s Sonatas: how far one can go, speaking of historically informed practice?

There is no limit: at the moment when a composer sends their music to the world, and the music starts to be performed, then ideas, interpretations, and different approaches begin to settle: and I’ve learnt this while performing contemporary music! Obviously, the more we go back into the past, performing music some centuries old, the more this layer of sediment is deep, and you must dig more.

Cathy Berberian, CCO

“Cathy Berberian was very keen on sharing her experience: talking a lot with her, I started to reckon that there was something that attracted me to baroque music.”

You were also an enthusiastic teacher, for 40 years Professor of Cello and String Quartet at Como’s Conservatory: what aspect of teaching are you most passionate about?

Teaching chamber music, I have always loved succeeding in making something meaningful with the pupil that came to study with me, whatever their level. And manage to do that also with the less gifted, and get together to the very heart of music.

Going back to your activity as a performer, you founded “Il Giardino Armonico” in 1985: tell us more about this ensemble, which is still very active.

Yes, after almost 40 years “Il Giardino Armonico” is very stable and active: well, the activity is not so frenetic, in a sense it is a bit reduced compared to our “roaring years”, but in a way that I appreciate. The projects are more diluted in time, but always intense and super-interesting. We recently performed Cavalieri’s Rappresentazione di Anima e Corpo, actually the first opera ever written. We are in the middle of a huge project devoted to the full performance of Haydn’s Symphonies. And we have our battle horses, performing XVII and XVIII centuries music also in little ensembles.

You mentioned your “roaring years”: thinking back to that time, what do you suggest to a young musician who wants to engage in a professional career?

My advice is to aim high: not in a superficial sense, but in the sense of striving for the highest level. I founded “Il Giardino Armonico” with Giovanni Antonini, Vittorio Ghielmi and Luca Bianca, musicians with different backgrounds, a lot of ideas, and the same desire of doing the best we could. We would rehearse a lot, even without concerts to come, just to improve ourselves and enrich our repertoire. This was the strength of our beginning.

Roaring years… “We would rehearse a lot, even without concerts to come, just to improve ourselves and enrich our repertoire. This was the strength of our beginning.” – © Il Giardino Armonico

These days, you are tutoring some of Theresia’s musicians: which is the repertoire you are focusing on?

We are working on chamber music for strings and for woodwinds and strings: Mozart’s String quartet in D major K155 is the most known, then we have two pieces by Joseph Martin Kraus (a string quartet and a flute quintet) and then two almost unknown pieces: a Quartet by Louis Massonneau and an Oboe Quintet by Jiří Družecký: it will be interesting to work on such a variety of repertoire.

Beschi performing with Il Giardino Armonico in a recent shot ©festivalterrassemsombra

Music has the main role in your life: do you have other passions?

As you said, music is extremely important in my life, it almost fills it. As my wife is a musician too, music has always been part of our family life too. We have always studied and played and made projects together, and for example, when the lockdown due to Covid happened, we didn’t get bored at all staying all the time at home: we had so much to play! Also in our workplace, as my wife is a teacher in the same Conservatory I was, we did a lot of projects together: she teaches chamber music, and with my String Quartet class, I can say that every student of the Conservatory studied with one (or both) of us at some time. But yes, I have other passion: I especially love photography and walking in the mountains, two essential parts of my spare time that enrich my life.

The residency in Montecastelli will end with a concert scheduled on 29 October, don’t miss it! Info for tickets and reservations at info@ilpoggiomontecastelli.it

Theresia Wind Academy

By Emilia Campagna - May 3, 2022
Next concerts of Theresia wind ensemble remind us the importance of playing chamber music

What is that makes special an orchestra like Theresia and defines it as a true classical orchestra? Two things, in fact: playing according to the historical informed performance principles, and playing the classical repertoire, i.e. music composed between 1750 and 1815. These two boxes we can definitely tick, and speaking of repertoire, we are never tired of exploring it, always deepening our knowledge and awareness of the incredible richness of classical music.

And actually, there is a third one: performing chamber music. Aside from being a powerful opportunity to improve technical aspects and widen the repertoire, chamber training facilitates mutual musical knowledge among ensemble members, with benefits for the quality of the work of the entire orchestra.

Our wind ensemble for example is at the centre of a chamber music residency twice a year. This is the case of the next project, which will take place from 2nd to 9th May in Lodi, with concerts in Lodi, Trieste, Capodistria, Turin.

The musical program is usually devoted to wind chamber music of the Viennese style, and so it is this time. Under the guidance of oboist Alfredo Bernardini, eight selected members of the orchestra will rehearse and perform music by Mozart, Beethoven and Krommer.

Franz Krommer was one of the most long-lived composers of the classical era: his 72-year lifespan began in 1759, half a year after the death of George Frideric Handel, and ended in 1831, nearly four years after that of Ludwig van Beethoven. His output was prolific, with at least three hundred published compositions, including much sonorous, idiomatic and at times powerful music for wind ensemble, for which he is best known today. Theresia wind ensemble will perform his Partita in B-flat major.

As for Mozart, we looked for something not obvious: our wind ensemble will perform an arrangement by Johann Nepomuk Wendt of Die Entführung aus dem Serail. The selection includes seven highlights of the opera, starting with the Ouverture.

The musical program will end with Beethoven’s E-flat major Octet, op. 103: it was composed in 1792 in Bonn, intended for Prince-Elector Maximilian Franz’s excellent Tafelmusik ensemble. Beethoven was so satisfied with his own musical invention that three years later he transcribed it for string quintet. The Octet itself remained unpublished until the death of the composer.

Musicians involved in this new project are Laura Hoeven (Austria) and Paulina Gómez Ortega (Colombia) – oboe; Claudia Pallaver (Italy) and Jonathan Van der Beek (Belgium) – horn; Luís Tasso Athayde Santos (Australia) and Angel Alvarez (Cuba) – bassoon; Franziska Hoffmann (Germany) and Simon Pibal (Austria) – clarinet.

Fondazione Cariplo contributed to this residency as part of the project “Alla scoperta degli strumenti a fiato dell’Orchestra Theresia” (“Discovering the wind instruments of Theresia Orchestra”).

Our places: Ossiach

By Emilia Campagna - February 21, 2022
There’s a place in the heart of the Alps that from time to time becomes our house. Read the article to find more about Ossiach and the Carinthian Music Academy (CMA)

There’s a place in the heart of the Alps that from time to time becomes our house. It’s a magical place, devoted to music, thanks to the Carinthian Music Academy (CMA) which has so far been our partner in two projects we held there. The name of the place is Ossiach, a little village in the South of Austria, famous for the historic Ossiach Abbey, with its Baroque collegiate church. Today the former 11th-century Benedictine monastery is a renowned cultural centre, beeing the venue of the Carinthian Summer international music festival and the Carinthian Music Academy.

Talking about CMA, it was founded in 2009 with the mission, as chief of administration Ulrike Baumgartner told us, of being a competence centre for further education and training. The CMA has quickly established itself as a popular meeting place for music and culture enthusiasts of all genres. Besides the regular course program, the CMA also offers the perfect infrastructure for events at two locations: Ossiach Abbey at Lake Ossiach and the Music Center Knappenberg high up above (second location, about an hour away from Ossiach, founded in 2007)”. The activity of the centre is intense, as it “organizes itself the concert series and supports organizers in conducting their concerts. Around 150 concerts and competitions take place annually”. It hosts “mainly Austrian musicians. But also musicians from all over Europe and American universities visit the CMA for rehearsals.” As everywhere, Covid affected CMA activity: “In 2020 and 2021, the academy had to stay closed for several months. Of course, there had been numerous cancellations, especially for concerts. Many rehearsal phases and courses have also been postponed.”

Luckily, activity has now restarted at full pace, and a new Theresia project is going to take place from 14 to 19 March, with the renowned violinists Chiara Banchini and Emilio Moreno as tutors, and a program devoted to string quartets, mostly by Boccherini but also by Mozart, Haydn and Pleyel. A concert at Kultur Forum Amthof will close the residency.

Looking back to our past projects in Ossiach, our first residency was in October 2018, with conductor Chiara Banchini, and Petr Zejfart as a tutor for wind players. The residency was devoted to the connections between Haydn and Joseph Martin Kraus, a composer we love: performing Haydn’s Ouverture from “L’Isola Disabitata” and Symphony n. 81 and Kraus’s Symphony in C major “Violino obbligato” with Gemma Longoni as soloist was a wonderful way to commemorate the meeting between the two composers. They met in 1781 and Haydn wrote a letter to the Swedish ambassador describing Kraus as “The first genius I ever met”. In 1781 Kraus spent quite a long time between Vienna and Estheraza, where he also conducted several works by Haydn.

The residency was intense and followed by two concerts, one in Ossiach itself and one in Munich, our first performance in Germany!

The second residency, we remember it very well, because it was in February 2020 and it was the last one before the prolonged pause due to Covid restrictions: it was a chamber music project, and the main tutor was Chiara Banchini again, together with cellist Marco Testori. Haydn’s String Quartet in G major op. 77 n. 1 and Beethoven’s String Quartet in c minor op. 18 n. 4 were deeply studied and rehearsed and performed in a concert at Palazzo Veneziano in Malborghetto, a lovely village just beyond the Italian border, which happens to be another place we truly love.

New year, new plans: what 2022 brings to us

By Emilia Campagna - January 18, 2022
Chamber music, orchestral residencies and the new European project EMPOWER: let's go through Theresia's activities for 2022

The new year has started, full of promises and good resolutions. And here an overview of our upcoming activity!

As you know, last year ended with a bang, and that’s the best good wish we could expect: a 3-years grant was awarded to Theresia Orchestra by the Creative Europe Programme to develop excellence in orchestral learning and soft skills acquisition by our young artistic talents. The project is going to start in a few weeks, so we will keep you updated on any further development.

So, let’s go through our plans for 2022!

We are going to start with two chamber music projects: developing ensemble performances and deepening chamber music repertoire are two things at the very core of our mission. Also, we’ll get back to places we’ve been before, renewing some meaningful partnerships.

From 14 to 20 March, we’ll be in Ossiach (Austria), with such tutors as Chiara Banchini (violin) and Emilio Moreno (violin and viola). The program will be devoted to string quartets by Mozart, Haydn, Pleyel and Boccherini, which will give our musicians the chance to widen their knowledge of classical repertoire.

 

A shot from chamber music residency in Ossiach in 2018

 

Wind players will have their moment in the spring: from 2 to 9 May, they will be in Lodi, following the lead of oboist Alfredo Bernardini and deepening some important pieces of music, like Krommer’s B flat major Partita P4:30 and Beethoven’s E flat major Partita op.113. Concerts in Lodi, Trieste and Turin will top off the residency, and we are looking forward to them.

Then, a new chamber music project will bring us back to Geneva, Switzerland, guests of Les Concerts d’été à St-Germain: Chiara Banchini and Alfredo Bernardini will be the tutors in this project, scheduled from 17 to 22 August, with concerts on 21 and 22 August.

A moment of 2021 performance at Les Concerts d’été à St-Germain, in Geneve

The whole orchestra will rejoin at the end of June in Mondovì: this residency (from 27 June to 3 July, with concerts in Susa and Cuneo) will mark the beginning of the collaboration with a new conductor, Vanni Moretto, which we are excited to start.

Last but not least, we are working hard on a new project that at the end of the year will celebrate our first 10 years of activity: stay tuned for that!

Theresia, a dip in chamber music

By theresia - April 17, 2018
A glance to the program of our next chamber music Academy

A glance at the program of our next chamber music Academy

Our first residency is going to start in a few days: it will be a string Academy devoted to chamber music and will be held in Cressia (France), with the violinist Chiara Banchini and the cellist Gaetano Nasillo as tutors.

Portrait of Beethoven as a young man

Let’s give a look to the music program. We will start with Beethoven’s String Trio op. 9 n. 3, the last of a set of three string trio composed by Beethoven in 1797-1798. It is written in C minor, and it brings the most energy and novelty with highly passionate tone.

This trio invokes those later works’ power and peculiar character so typical of Beethoven. Dynamic effects, sharp contrasts in rhythm, harmonic confrontations among other means of music provide momentum and the tone of anxiety. By contrast, the Adagio brings peace and resignation in C major, with a more lively episode in E flat major in the middle of the movement. Both the Scherzo and the Finale continue the passionate and energetic storm of the first movement.C minor is one of Beethoven’s most important keys. Three of his piano sonatas and the fifth symphony were written in C minor, for instance. Then we have Luigi Boccherini‘s String Quintet in D major op. 39 n. 3 G 339, in which he deployed the distinctive combination of two violins, viola, cello, and double bass; this quintet is the third of a set of three. Boccherini was an incredibly prolific composer, and he wrote also over one hundred string quintets for two violins, viola and two cellos (a type which he pioneered, in contrast with the then common scoring for two violins, two violas and one cello). In op. 39 n. 3 the cello has often a prominent and challenging role; and very particular indeed is the twangy guitar effects in the finale.

 

Boccherini’s Quintet op. 39 n. 3 performed by Ensemble 415. Violins: Chiara Banchini and Enrico Gatti; Viola: Emilio Moreno; Violoncello: Käthi Gohl; Contrabass: Cléna Stein

Last but not least, even if not so well known, is the String Quintet in G major n. 23 by Giuseppe Maria Cambini: anyone who thought Boccherini was the first purveyor of string quintets with two cellos, would be wrong. Giuseppe Maria Cambini (1729–?83) was 14 years Boccherini’s senior and wrote 114 of them, a number that may actually exceed that of his younger compatriot. Both men were born in Italy, Boccherini in Lucca, Cambini in Livorno. But other than the commonality of their birth country, their careers took them in very different directions.

Boccherini, as we know, headed to Madrid, where he was employed by the Infante Luis Antonio, younger brother of King Charles III.  Cambini located in Paris around 1770, but wisely did not seek royal patronage in a monarchical succession that would soon enough disappear. Instead, Cambini managed to make it on his own, concentrating mainly on the writing of more than 600 purely instrumental works. Although it must be said that Cambini played little part in the radical musical developments of the Classical period, his music is richly textured, mellifluous, agreeably harmonized, and lengthily worked out.

Theresia’s strings will perform the musical program Saturday evening in Dole (France). Download here the program!