Italian waltz executed by the Italian mandolin Maestro ANTONIO CALSOLARO and Fabio Moschettini (Guitar), a traditional Waltz of the Italian culture, the traditional Mandolin music was introduce, during the 18th century, in the "Italian Barbers Saloon". The Maestro Calsolaro, executes a beautiful dancing waltz music as a gift for his world friends
WALTZ HISTORY - WALZEN - VALSER - HISTORICAL COMPOSERS
The name "waltz" from the German verb walzen. Although French writers have attempted to connect the waltz to the 16th-century volta, firm evidence connecting this Italian form to the earliest occurrence in the mid-18th century of walzen to describe dancing is lacking.
Classical composers traditionally supplied music for dancing when required, and Franz Schubert's waltzes were written for household dancing. However, Frédéric Chopin's surviving 18 waltzes (five he wrote as a child), along with his mazurkas and polonaises, were clearly not intended to be danced to. They marked the adoption of the waltz and other dance forms as serious composition genres. Other notable contributions to the waltz genre in classical music include 16 by Johannes Brahms(originally for piano duet), and Maurice Ravel's Valses nobles et sentimental for piano and La waltz for orchestra.
The long period of the waltz's popularity was brought to an end by the First World War, which destroyed the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and the Viennese culture which had nurtured it for so long. European light music shifted from Vienna to Berlin, and compositions by composers such as Gustav Mahler, Igor Stravinsky, and William Walton treated the dance in a nostalgic or grotesque manner as a thing of the past. Waltzes nevertheless continued to be written by composers of light music, such as Eric Coates, Robert Stolz, Ivor Novello, Richard Rodgers, Cole Porter, Oscar Straus, and Stephen Sondheim. The predominant ballroom form in the 20th century has become the slow waltz, which rose to popularity around 1910 and was derived from the valse Boston of the 1870s. Examples derived from popular songs include '"Ramona" (1927), "Parlami d'amore, Mariù" (1933), and "The Last Waltz" (1970) (Lamb 2001).
ITALIAN MANDOLIN MUSIC BY MAESTRO ANTONIO CALSOLARO - LIVE CONCERTS AND PRESENTATIONS
He's preparing a book, including music sheet, of his many arrangements for Mandolin and guitar, mainly of the Italian traditional music since 1800 and 1900. The Maestro Antonio Calsolaro performances in the "Culture Palace of Alessano Lecce - Italy" the final week of August 2023. He executes his own exclusive "Traditional Italian Sheet Music".
He's available for live music concerts, exhibitions, shows, Italian party around the world, please contact us for your requirements Whatsapp: +39.333.6371.644
ITALIAN MANDOLIN HISTORY
Mandolins evolved from the lute family in Italy during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and the deep bowled mandolin produced particularly in Naples became a common type in the nineteenth century. The original instrument was the mandore which evolved in the fourteenth century from the lute. The first evidence of modern steel-strung mandolins is from literature regarding popular Italian players who traveled through Europe teaching and giving concerts. Notable is Signor Leone and G. B. Gervasio who traveled widely between 1750 and 1810. This, with the records gleaned from the Italian Vinaccia family of luthiers in Naples, Italy, lead some musicologists to believe that the modern steel-strung mandolin was developed in Naples by the Vinaccia family. Gennaro Vinaccia was active circa 1710 to circa 1788, and Antonio Vinaccia was active circa 1734 to circa 1796. An early extant example of a mandolin is one built by Antonio Vinaccia in 1772 which resides at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. Another is by Giuseppe Vinaccia built in 1763, residing at the Kenneth G. Fiske Museum of Musical Instruments in Claremont, California. The earliest extant mandolin was built in 1744 by Gaetano Vinaccia. It resides in the Conservatoire Royal de Musique in Brussels, Belgium