Skip to main content

SIENA BY NIGHT: AN EVENING WITH ACADEMY AWARD WINNER LUIS BACALOV


Argentinian pianist and composer Luis Bacalov
Luis Bacalov 


Luis Bacalov was born in Argentina in 1933 and started to play the piano as a five-year old in Buenos Aires, where he was taught by Enrique Barenboim (father of pianist and director Daniel Barenboim). 

Starting his concert career as a young man in Argentina, Bacalov has always shown a big interest in South America's folk music. In the 60s the pianist started to compose film music for Italian and French directors like Pasolini, Wertmüller, Lefèbvre, Borowczyk and Fellini. 


His collaboration with Michael Radford for the soundtrack of Il Postino (starring Massimo Troisi and Philippe Noiret) brought the composer world-wide acclaim and an Oscar for the best original score at the Academy Awards in 1996. A selection of Bacalov's composition also feature in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill and Django Unchained. 










Since 2002 teacher for film scores at the master classes of the Accademia Musicale Chigiana, Luis Bacalov will present a mainly Argentinian program with music by Carlos Gardel, Astor Piazzolla, Juan José Castro, Ángel Villoldo, Atahualpa Yupanqui and some of his own compositions. 


Palazzo Chigi Saracini, 9pm Friday 1st of March, 2013

LUIS BACALOV, piano 

TICKETS: 8 to 25 Euro via the internet or from 8pm at the ticket office at Palazzo Chigi Saracini (Via di Città, 89). For more information and ticket reservation phone +39 0577 22091 or +39 333 93 855 43. 

Popular posts from this blog

BEST BIKE RENTAL IN SIENA

Villa Catignano: one of the many beautiful places an e-bike can get you to from Siena A few years ago, I interviewed an American writer , who during her month-long stay in Siena whizzed through the city on a bicycle. This was an unusual sight - vespas are the two-wheelers of choice in Siena's hilly town center, not bikes like in mostly flat Florence.  But the invention of e-bikes is about to change this. The city of Siena has installed an  electric bike sharing program which is functioning well. However, it's mostly aimed at locals and residents, as its set-up is a little complicated for visitors who only stay a couple of days in town. Hence, for tourists, the best bike rental options in Siena are with the privately owned shops which supply bycicles of every size and type for a day or two or an entire week.  Giulia from Julskitchen.com cycling through the hills of Siena Siena Bike Shop rents out racing bycicles, hybrid and e-bikes and is a great optio...

SIENA AS EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE IN 2019? AN INTERVIEW WITH PIER LUIGI SACCO

Every year the European Union designates at least two cities from different member countries to become European Capitals of Culture for a period of 12 months. Italy’s turn is up again in 2019 (together with Bulgaria), and Siena has joined the race as one of the candidate cities, which are competing to represent the country and the whole of Europe. Recently the website of SIENA 2019  has been launched in English, which gave me the opportunity to meet project director Pier Luigi Sacco to find out more about the reasons behind Siena’s candidature. Originally from Pescara the head of  # SIENA2019 is professor of Cultural Economics at IULM university in Milan and of Creative Industries at the university of Lugano in Switzerland. No doubt a busy man, Pier Luigi Sacco nevertheless took proper time to thoroughly answer my questions. The interview took place at the headquarters of  # SIENA2019, which are based in the fascinating underground maze of the Santa Maria d...

Ambrogio Lorenzetti's frescoes and paintings

From toddlers to octogenarians, when in Siena I schlepp everybody to see Ambrogio Lorenzetti's 'Buon Governo'. The long title of the painting is 'The Allegory of Good and Bad Government in the City and the Countryside' and it is exactly that - namely an accurate depiction of daily life in medieval Siena. The detailed and elegant fresco cycle is a rarity not just in regard to Lorenzetti's style and technique, but mainly due to its subject matter. In the 14th century, paintings and frescoes focus on stories and characters from the old and new testament and  not on the day-to-day tasks of builders and farmers.  Medieval Siena depicted on one of the walls of Ambrogio Lorenzetti's fresco cycle in the Palazzo Pubblico (©Wikipedia) And this is exactly why it's so much fun to spend some time in front of the fresco cycle in the  civic museum in Siena's Palazzo Pubblico. Whether its kids  - or meat lovers - looking for the famous Cinta Senese pig  ...