Vincenzo Maltempo

Vincenzo Maltempo
Born (1985-07-02) July 2, 1985
Benevento, Italy
Genres Classical
Instruments Piano
Labels Piano Classics, Gramola
Website vincenzomaltempo.com

Vincenzo Maltempo (born July 2, 1985) is an Italian pianist. He was born in Benevento, Italy.

He began his musical studies with Salvatore Orlando, disciple of the pianist Sergio Fiorentino, with whom he graduated at S. Cecilia Conservatory in Rome, with Summa cum Laude. From 2006 to 2009 he attended the courses held by Riccardo Risaliti at the International Piano Academy "Incontri col Maestro" in Imola.

In 2006 he won the XXIII Competition "Premio Venezia",[1] in Teatro "La Fenice" (Venice, Italy), and starting an successfully international career playing in the Theater "La Fenice" in Venice, "Teatro Lirico" in Cagliari, the "Liszt Festival" in Austria, in concert halls in Spain, Germany, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Japan.

His first recording was released in 2008 by Gramola and dedicated to Franz Liszt.[2] Afterwards, from 2011, he began a series of recordings with Piano Classics[3] dedicated to Charles-Valentin Alkan, composer of which he is considered nowadays one of the most important and devoted advocate ("With these passionate recordings Maltempo confirms his place in the restricted circle of Alkan’s best performers").[4] His CDs have gained great approval by the international critics, obtaining five stars in reviews on such papers like The Guardian[5][6] and Diapason.[7] Furthermore, he his one of the few pianists who recorded the complete set of Alkan's Études Op. 39 and one of the three pianists who played so far the complete set of these Etudes in one concert (November 2, 2013 in Yokohama, Minato Mirai Hall, Japan).[8]

His Alkan recordings for Piano Classics include also other important works such as the Grande Sonate Op. 33, the Sonatine Op. 61 and the Trois Morceaux dans le genre pathétique Op. 15. Maltempo also collaborated with Italian pianist Emanuele Delucchi on a CD of the complete Vianna da Motta transcriptions of organ works by Alkan.

In the September 2014 he is nominated "Honorary Member" of the London Alkan Society.[9]

His repertoire goes from the baroque music to the modern music, with a particular interest in the romantic music and in the less performed piano repertoire (Alkan, Leopold Godowsky, Élie-Miriam Delaborde, Jean-Henri Ravina, Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmermann, Cécile Chaminade, et al.). He also published for Ries&Erler piano transcriptions of the Second Suite from the ballet "Daphnis et Chloé" by M. Ravel and the Symphony by Hans Rott, the first piano solo concert transcription of that work.

He is one of the founder and a piano teacher of the "Imola Piano Academy - Talent development Eindhoven",[10] a piano Academy in the Netherlands founded by the pianist Andrè Gallo under the advocacy of the International Piano Academy "Incontri col Maestro" in Imola; he gave masterclasses at the European Arts Academy "Aldo Ciccolini" in Trani. He is piano teacher in the Italian Conservatory.

Discography

References

External links

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