
The Winner of 2003 International Web Concert Hall
Competition
(Honorary Mention)
MOL: Tell us about your
musical background.
I started playing the piano when I was four years old. At home, we had a small
up-right piano and I used to climb and play the keys by ear various tunes. As my
grand-father noticed that I had "talent" (in his term), he started to teach me.
He always looked for ways for me to practice the piano, instead of me playing with my
friends. This includes, offering a chewing-gum, candy or some sticker cards. I was
admitted to the Conservatory "G. Rossini" in Pesaro at 11 and a half and
graduated 9 years later with First Class honours. In addition, my teacher Franco Scala
created a Music Academy in Imola (his town) and I had the chance to attend Master classes
with the most distinguished teachers and pianists of the world such as Vladimir Ashkenazy,
Lazar Berman, Nikita Magaloff, Aldo Ciccolini, Joerg Demus, Bruno Canino, etc. Today, the
Academy is called "Incontri col Maestro", which is internationally recognized
and many of its students won some of the most prestigious International Piano
Competitions. I started attending Piano Competitions when I was 16 and for the next 6
years, it has become main musical activity. I enjoyed every moment of it. I enjoyed the
way audience responded to my performances and judges complimenting about my playing. Since
winning "A. Casagrande" in Terni in 1986, playing piano became very important
part of my life.
MOL: Tell us about your teachers?
Well, after my grandpa and a couple of local piano teachers, my first,
lets say "professional" piano teacher and also the one who has been
teaching me for quite a long time (15 years), was Franco Scala. Mr. Scala has been a very
important person during my school years and the only one I was able to offer my trust and
respect. He had a very distinctive way of communicating his ideas in playing the piano. I
cant quite remember details of it
but I remember that he was very demanding on
the mechanics of playing the piano. For example, in the first years I was obsessed with some finger exercises trying to understand how I can transfer the mass of my
arms and body on the keyboard to obtain a powerful sound without forcing the sound and
making my muscles not to stiffen and not to create metallic and unpleasant sound. During
these years I had the opportunity to learn, listen and know a lot of virtuoso pianists who
came and visited our Academy. All of them had some unique and precious guidance to offer
us and I have kept all these incredible experiences in my mind as a very important part of
my artistic development. Actually I think Ive adopted small secrets from everyone
and turned into small pieces of my "playing-puzzle". After all this, at 27, I
really felt the need to isolate from everything and consider all I have learned and to be
true to myself. At the time, I was only imitating someone. From that moment and on, I
learned on my own to take responsibility in my playing. This may sound like a stupid thing
but it was a very important step for me to take
a step to becoming a strong,
convincing and a performer with characteristic. I thought this may have been too
presumptuous but after reading Arthur Rubinsteins auto-biography saying that this
thing should happen at 18 years old in a pianist life, I was encouraged to go on.
MOL: Your family influence in your choice of musical career...
My family has been very important for my choice for music. Actually at that
age (4 years old) you cant really choose your life, you do something that comes easy
and something that fascinates you
and that is all you do. As I said before, my
grandpa was a musician. He played the violin, guitar and other musical instruments. He had
a small orchestra and he frequently performed in dancing-places playing pop and folk
music
most music composed by himself. He also used to teach at home and I attended
all his lessons together with his students. My father also played the trumpet and the
trombone and he also had a small orchestra performing mostly pop and jazz. The funny thing
is that he is an electrician and in the 60s he worked during the day and performed
at night. Of course after sometime he had to stop because the number of his family was
increasing. He brought a small piano one day, which was used in his orchestra and that
piano was my first instrument. Although they played pop, folk or jazz, at home, the
favourite music to be listened was classical. My grandma was crazy about Operas and she
used to sing loud most of the Arias she enjoyed and loved. I think that my fathers
secret dream was to be the conductor. He loves and knows mostly symphonic repertoire.
Im the eldest daughter of three and my sister is in the field of dance and my
brother plays drums in a Rock Band.
MOL: Tell us about your practicing strategy...
I believe that each musician must realize what was given from God and what we must work
hard to obtain it. These two things must collaborate side by side and should continue to
polish it. Unfortunately I dont think there is one practicing strategy that works
all time because we change many times in the course of life. The real strategy is to
understand that and be able to "adjust" ourselves to work to bring its fullest
in the given circumstances so that it will lead to its highest potential. A pianist can
choose the repertoire based on his/her strengths, but then, they can fail to improve their
weakness. I heard many adult pianists playing in a very "naïf" way of
interpreting music. Sometimes, superb technique was displayed on the instrument and
nothing more. On the other side, I extremely enjoy pianists who may not be
technical-perfect polished, but were able to transmit strong expressive energy and
emotions to tears. What I try to do is to create a cocktail of instinct, rational,
passion, energy, fantasy, interiority and mystical imagination all at the same time and
being aware of what is my limit during that moment so that I dont stumble. There is,
of course, a part of this mechanism, positive or negative, that is unexpected and that I
cannot control or foresee; a kind of magic that sometimes get tuned between the audience
and myself, which it can promote and heightened the experience to an incredible, powerful
energy. By the way, my practicing time is always very intense and I rarely get over 4-5
hours per day.
MOL: In your opinion, what is your strength in your playing?
Its very difficult to be objective on my own playing. I think I have a
strong part of natural musical intuition that always shines spontaneously during the
performance; an ability to hold together the mental frame of musical form without falling
apart. I was always told that my tone "sounds" like coming from a male
performer, that is, powerful and round. I also feel very strong about my playing is being
able to hear inner rhythm of music. Its like a body pulsation; once it starts, it
keeps on going. This, I think, turns also into an ability for me to give a very quick
response to my fingers so that they can react on the keyboard; this may be possible
because of my bodily shape, long and thin.
MOL: Do you like any other forms of art? Such as painting? Tell us about it.
I like all forms of art, specially figurative arts such as painting, but not
to the point of getting informed about all the details that are involved in it. I got
emotional to tears in front of two paintings that I saw in expositions: the first one is
Gustav Klimt in Vienna, representing trees in the woods, the light in it was so magical
that I was shocked. The second painting was in New York at MOMA, Monets
"Water-lilies", the complete triptych. I was with my partner (in music and in
life) Pasquale Iannone and after having been in that room for a short while in silence, we
looked each other and both of us had tears in our eyes. We had to leave because our
reaction towards the painting was becoming too emotional and it was embarrassing in front
of the people in the room. The sensation for me was like being embraced and wrapped on
360° by all the warmth of those colours and the depth of the indefinite outline so much
that I almost lost my consciousness.
In your opinion, what are the characteristics of a good performer?
Well, considering that from a performers point of view, he or she must be in good
health, must have strong nerves, must be able to communicate to the audience. If he wants
to make a career, must like travelling very often and dont have any kind of phobia
(such as flying), must be open-minded to new cultures, food and habits, should speak more
than one language, should be good in public relations and choose a good manager for a good
promotion, should be rich (it helps!), but above all, one must like this kind of job and
be bold to stand on all kinds of stress and the hard work that follows, such as feeling
lonely in your hotel room in a foreign country. The beginning of ones career is
always exciting and full of thrilling experience. However, the difficult part from all of
it is to be able to maintain such life-style for a long period of time. About the audience
point of view, a good performer is the one who I enjoy listening to... thats all !!
MOL: How do you judge a good performance?
The performance must convince me, even if their interpretation does not agree
with me. It must work as a whole and be able to support its logic and be able to display
its construction. But most importantly, it must be able to make my soul and emotions to
respond from it.
MOL: Wh ere do you live now?
I live in the Southern Italy in a town called Barletta, on the Adriatic Sea. My family
is made up of three people: Pasquale Iannone, our 3-years-old daughter Eleonora and I.
MOL: What do you hope to achieve ten years from now
in your music career?
I have no idea; I consider all is given to me, in terms of career and luck. I
hope not to loose, owing to any reason, the chance to perform in front of the audience.
MOL: On be half of MusicalOnline, we would
like to thank you for your time and we wish all the success.
Interviewed by
MusicalOnline on August, 2003

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