Anthony di Bonaventura

Anthony di Bonaventura (born November 12, 1929) is the Professor of Music at Boston University's College of Fine Arts.

Anthony di Bonaventura began piano studies at three years old and gave the first professional concert at four years old. Then he won a scholarship to New York's Music School Settlement at six. At thirteen, he appeared as a soloist with the New York Philharmonic. At sixteen, he became the pupil of the celebrated Russian teacher Madame Isabella Vengerova and later entered the Curtis Institute of Music, where he graduated with highest honors.

Enthusiastic acclaim by critics and audiences came early in his career. After his Washington debut, Paul Hume of the Washington Post wrote: "He can stand with the great players of Mozart's keyboard music." His brilliant performances in an early European tour led to his selection by the great conductor Otto Klemperer to perform the complete Beethoven Concerti at the London Beethoven Festival.

He has performed in 27 countries in recital and with such major orchestras as the Boston Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, Royal Philharmonic and Vienna Symphony. He has appeared in the Great Performances Series at Lincoln Center and the festivals of Ann Arbor, Saratoga, Bergen(Norway), Graz(Austria) and Almeida(England). During his second tour of Australia and New Zealand, he was the soloist for the concerts which opened the famed Sydney Opera House.

Many distinguished composers of our time such as György Ligeti, Luciano Berio, Alberto Ginastera, Milko Kelemen and Vincent Persichetti have written works especially for him. And he performed the world premieres of compositions include: Ligeti's Piano Concerto (1986), Ginastera's Piano Sonata No.2 (1992), Berio's Points on the Curve to Find (1975), Persichetti's Piano Concerto (1968).

In 1991, he performed the Netherlands premiere of Witold Lutosławski's Piano Concerto with the composer conducting, followed by performances also conducted by Lutoslawski with the Boston Symphony, Polish National Radio Symphony and San Francisco Symphony in 1993, on the occasion of the composer's 80th birthday.

He has made a number of recordings. His recording of the Debussy Etudes has been described by the Boston Globe as "one of the wonders of the world". Other recordings include Scarlatti's 14 Keyboard Sonatas, Rachmaninoff's Complete Preludes, op.32 and so on.

References

  1. Biography Notes from Domenico Scarlatti: 14 Keyboard Sonatas, Centaur Records, Inc., 2006
  2. Dubal, David. The Art of Piano: Its Performers, Literature, and Recordings (The 3rd Edition). Amadeus Press, 2005.

External links