Memories of the Fall

“A whirlwind of emotions” would hardly be an exaggeration to describe my life over the past few months. Losing my elderly mother in September was, as one might expect, a heavy blow. Yet in a musician’s life, “the show must go on”—and there was no real time to grieve.

Preparing for Milan

I had spent the summer practising and researching the concertos of Niccolò Jommelli, Francesco Durante and Domenico Cimarosa, in view of performances scheduled in Milan for October and November. Meanwhile, a short tour of the USA was tentatively planned, though the uncertainty surrounding my visa kept everything up in the air. The work was engrossing, though far more demanding than I had foreseen.

These concertos—some of the earliest examples of the “piano concerto”—presented difficulties from the outset. Written in the mid-eighteenth century, during the transition from the harpsichord to Cristofori’s Florentine piano, they were undoubtedly written for the composers’ own use. The maestro al cembalo both led the ensemble and played the solo part, which meant there was no need to write out the solo fully. What survives is little more than an elegant skeleton: sketches upon which the composer would improvise his embellishments.

Reconstructing this practice today is both thrilling and daunting. The surviving clues are scattered through treatises and chronicles, and for every decision there lurks the risk of going too far. With the complicity of my editor at Zecchini, I documented much of this research in a long article published in the October and November issues of MUSICA magazine (Italian only, but available on the magazine’s website).

Scarlattiana and the Italian Concerts

A special companion to these early concertos was Alfredo Casella’s Scarlattiana—a “Divertimento on music by Domenico Scarlatti”—a work I first played what feels like a lifetime ago. Approaching it now as a Scarlatti scholar revealed new layers of Casella’s mastery.

On October 12th we performed in Roncade for the grand finale of Sile Classica, the festival founded by my brilliant young colleague Elia Cecino. The Insubria Chamber Orchestra under Giorgio Rodolfo Marini played were supporting, and the hall was filled to the brim. The following day we travelled to Milan to perform Scarlattiana again, this time preceded by Durante’s Concerto in B-flat, at the Sala Verdi for Serate Musicali—the prestigious season founded by that visionary impresario answering the name of Hans Fazzari. Scarlattiana was expectedly a success; Durante was more of a wild card, but the audience loved it.

I barely had time to return home, rinse my uniforms, and breathe. The visa had arrived, and three days later I was on a plane bound for Florida.

Across the Atlantic

The flight was less than ideal (a young family determined to roam the cabin made sure of that), and I arrived in Miami more dead than alive. There I met Dr. José López—a fine pianist and longtime colleague—and we restored ourselves with Cuban food before collapsing into much-needed rest.

The following day I taught a short masterclass at Florida International University, where three talented students presented Beethoven, Brahms and Schumann. That evening, still battling jet lag, I performed at the Wertheim Center for the Arts: Schubert’s Four Impromptus Op. 90, seven Scarlatti sonatas, and an all-Liszt second half featuring the Two Legends and the Grosses Konzertsolo (the concert was co-produced by the South Florida Chapter of the American Liszt Society). The audience’s warmth helped greatly.

The next morning I flew to Tampa to meet the extraordinary Tina Giorgio of Steinway & Sons Sarasota—an irrepressible force in the arts. She had organised a Scarlatti masterclass at 2 PM (again filled with wonderful students), followed by a programme of sonatas and Liszt’s Legends. That same evening I took part in the President’s Circle performance at Tampa’s Antinori Center for the Arts of the Jesuit High School, another rewarding musical encounter.

Return to Italy and the Jommelli Premiere

Back in Italy, I headed straight to the Pavia Conservatory for exams, then immediately prepared for the second Milan concert featuring the concertos of Jommelli—receiving its first modern performance—and Cimarosa. Rehearsals with the Insubria Chamber Orchestra were intense: the Jommelli parts were riddled with misprints, and Sunday’s rehearsal was painfully slow. But on November 10th everything clicked, and the performance was a success. To my delight, my own cadenzas were also appreciated.

A few days later, on November 13th, I received an official invitation to return to Serate Musicali next season, this time with another Jommelli concerto and three by Giovanni Paisiello. Exciting indeed—but these are for next October, nearly a year away.

Looking Ahead

There will be many more concerts before then. New music to learn, digest and re-create, in that perpetual motion of music-making that can be exhausting—even gruelling—but is always invigorating for the spirit.

A few days of rest, and then we begin again…

Rave review

https://www.operaclick.com/recensioni/teatrale/pisa-palazzo-blu-recital-del-pianista-sandro-ivo-bartoli

Signor Luca Fialdini penned a wonderful review of Mr Bartoli’s recital in Palazzo Blu last March 9th. It can be read here (in Italian): https://www.operaclick.com/recensioni/teatrale/pisa-palazzo-blu-recital-del-pianista-sandro-ivo-bartoli
Here the English version:
OPERACLICK – March 16th, 2025.

Pisa – Palazzo Blu: Sandro Ivo Bartoli’s recital.
By Luca Fialdini.

The 2025 edition of Domenica in Musica, the festival organized by the Fondazione AREA and under the artistic direction of Vincenzo Maxia, is approaching its conclusion. The penultimate concert of the program features Sandro Ivo Bartoli, for the second time this year a “propheta in patria,” as he returns to the auditorium of Palazzo Blu with a three-part recital dedicated to Schubert, Scarlatti, and Liszt. These three composers represent entirely different sound worlds, just as the eras they evoke and their approaches to keyboard writing differ (not to mention styles and performance practices). This journey finds its unity precisely in its diverse destinations: from chamber music to the stage, from public music to more intimate compositions.
There is probably no composer better than Franz Schubert to embody the ideal of “intimate music”: intended for a very small audience, characterized by delicate sonorities and an expression of emotions that, in the broadest sense, can truly be defined as “private.” The famous 4 Impromptus Op. 90 impeccably follow this concept. Consider, for example, No. 1 in C minor, Beethovenian in both thematic conception and development, which was composed spontaneously as a posthumous tribute to his friend Ferdinand Walcher.
The first element that captures the ear (and remains a constant throughout the recital) is Bartoli’s expressive use of tone, which also demonstrates remarkable control of sound and articulation. Each note carries its own weight, producing a highly effective interplay of inner voices and treating the instrument in a way that creates orchestral-like colors and perspective. But it is not just a matter of sound and color shading; his management of dynamic density, from the fullest textures to silence, is also noteworthy. Impromptu No. 1 is particularly rich in these contrasts. Bartoli’s approach to this precarious balance—constantly wavering between a romanticism that never fully blooms and a classicism that has faded but not yet disappeared—is striking. Beethoven’s shadow is ever-present, yet there is no excess sentimentality or tragic allure. Even in the seductive B minor region of No. 2 (which might benefit from a slightly slower tempo), he favors Schubert’s characteristic tone—at once dreamlike and punctuated by abrupt awakenings, an eternal wandering from Heimat to the unknown, with no certainty of return.
The lyrical qualities, often associated with Schubert’s lieder tradition, are also well rendered. No. 3 offers a straightforward cantabile style, alternately imitating the human voice and string instruments, while No. 1 molds its fragile march theme into ever-evolving forms, beginning with an unharmonized melodic line and culminating in the sublime cello-like song of the left hand in No. 4. Bartoli’s reading of this Allegretto in A-flat major intriguingly links Schubert and Scarlatti, particularly through its rhythmic drive of sixteenth-note quartets and a modulating sequence performed with a crystalline, well-articulated touch reminiscent of 18th-century keyboard writing.
The second part of the program is undoubtedly the most anticipated, featuring Bartoli’s signature Scarlatti. This well-established pairing has resulted in a monumental video recording of all 556 keyboard sonatas and the publication of “Domenico Scarlatti. ‘Vivi felice.’ Vita e opere di Scarlattino, Cavaliero di San Giacomo,” published by Zecchini. The shift is sudden and complete—not just due to Bartoli’s deeper familiarity with Scarlatti compared to Schubert, but also due to his total internalization of the Neapolitan composer’s work. Ten sonatas are presented, each a strikingly diverse microcosm, interpreted with dazzling imagination. His deeply personal approach, whether one agrees with it or not, is a refreshing counterpoint to the often standardized interpretative readings in today’s piano scene.
While playing Scarlatti, Bartoli is entirely at ease (as he puts it, “like a mushroom in the damp”). Everything is vibrant and luminous, the musical discourse elegant and executed with striking clarity of sound—a result of the technical control and beautiful articulation previously mentioned. Each of these ten sonatas, each of these ten stunning miniatures, has been given its ideal character, a feat possible only through an inventive spirit that harmonizes with that of the composer.
In this historically informed performance (to use the fashionable term), there is no place for sterile, stiff baroque mannerisms or gimmicky surprises. Instead, the focus is direct and clear: the desire to deliver Domenico Scarlatti’s music exactly as it appears on the score—nothing more, nothing less. Surely, the “man of a thousand devils” would be pleased.
The intense matinée concludes with the Fantasia and Fugue on the Theme B-A-C-H, originally composed for symphonic organ and transcribed for piano by the composer himself, Franz Liszt. A true virtuoso showpiece aligned with Bartoli’s fiery expressivity, this work is a formidable challenge both in terms of technical bravura and structural complexity. The performer must navigate an expansive architectural framework where thematic elements are first presented individually, then reappear in variation and superimposition, forming a tightly woven musical mechanism that demands great effort.
Bartoli masterfully captures the spectacular performative aspect so characteristic of Liszt, with its dazzling figures and gestures integral to this phase of his compositional output. However, beyond the virtuosity, he also delves deeply into the complex musical text, which extends far beyond its flamboyant flourishes. He highlights the B-A-C-H motif, which, rather than serving as a mere symbol for Liszt, acts as a source of thematic and harmonic material. Indeed, the seemingly endless development of this piece appears intent on extracting every possible nuance from the four-note figure—first introduced as an ostinato, then transformed into a fully-fledged melodic element.
More than ever, Bartoli’s tendency to treat the piano as a one-man orchestra pays off, weaving Liszt’s dense textures to evoke orchestral instrumentation. He also maintains a strong underlying tension, lending weight even to the most ethereal and mysterious moments (such as the pianissimo entry of the fugue’s subject). The result is a performance that is vigorous, at times pyrotechnic, yet always deeply insightful.
As a final farewell to the enthusiastic audience, Bartoli offers one last tribute to Domenico Scarlatti: the Sonata in F minor, K. 519.

Luca Fialdini
(This review refers to the concert of March 9, 2025).

SCARLATTI BIOGRAPHY PUBLISHED

Zecchini Editore just published Sandro Ivo Bartoli’s biography of Domenico Scarlatti. Titled “Vivi felice”, the life and works of Scarlattino, Knight of San Giacomo, the in-depht study of the Neapolitan Maestro reunites the latest Scarlattian scholarship in a new, fresh perspective: that of an active performer. In addition to the narrative of Scarlatti’s life, uniquely the book offers a commentary on each and every Sonata in the Kirkpatrick catalogue. Available in all major bookstores or directly from the publisher, here: https://www.zecchini.com/catalogo/collane/compositori-0/domenico-scarlatti-