MUSIC DIRECTOR SALVATORE DI VITTORIO

Italian-born Salvatore Di Vittorio has achieved international recognition as a composer and conductor, hailed by Luigi Verdi of the prestigious Philharmonic Academy of Bologna, as a “lyrical musical spirit, respectful of the ancient Italian tradition…and an emerging leading interpreter of the music of Ottorino Respighi.” He gained considerable attention with his orchestration and completion of Ottorino Respighi’s rediscovered first Violin Concerto (in A Major), a commission he received from Respighi’s family descendants and archive curator.

First noticed by chamber orchestras in Italy which premiered his early compositions, often in programs with Respighi’s music, Di Vittorio has been acclaimed a “serious, lyrical and romantic composer…following in the footsteps of Ottorino Respighi.” He then aroused national interest as Music Director and Founder of the Chamber Orchestra of New York “Ottorino Respighi” which debuted on October 11, 2007 at Zankel Hall, Carnegie Hall – one of the first fully-auditioned ‘young professionals’ orchestras in New York, dedicated (in part) to the Italian repertoire. Following the inaugural season finale, Vivien Schweitzer of The New York Times wrote: "The musicians played…producing a polished, rich sound…a stirring performance [of Mahler’s Adagietto and]…a voluptuous rendition of Tchaikovsky's Souvenir…." In 2010, under the auspices of the Chamber Orchestra, he founded “The Respighi Prize” Music Competition with the City of Bologna.

Praised by renowned conductor Piero Bellugi for his compositions and elegance on the podium, Di Vittorio has been featured as composer and conductor by numerous orchestras: Accademia Musicale Siciliana, Teatro Massimo Opera (Palermo), Orchestra Filarmonica Franco Ferrara, Chamber Ensemble of Rome, Orchestra da Camera Fiorentina, Florence Symphonietta, Festival Sinfonietta Umbra (Perugia), Carnevale di Venezia Musica, Royal College of Music Symphony (London), Brussels Chamber Ensemble, San Jose Chamber Orchestra, Vancouver Island Symphony, State Symphony of Sofia (Bulgaria), El Hanager String Orchestra (Cairo), Danbury Symphony, Adelphi University Symphony and Metropolitan Youth Orchestra. His music is inspired by philosophical-programmatic themes and captivates each listener with poignant lyricism and magnificent orchestrations.

Di Vittorio’s completion of Respighi’s Violin Concerto was showcased along with his transcription/revision of Respighi’s Aria and Suite for strings, his own homage Overtura Respighiana and first two Sinfonias on Naxos Records (8.572332 and 8.572333). The recordings were immediately successful on the international level, listed for several weeks on Gramophone Top 20 Classical Chart in London, honored as WQXR Classical Radio NY “Album of the Week” and “Album of the Month” in Italy (for June and July 2011). The music has also aired on RAI and BBC radio stations, and dozens of other stations in the U.S. and abroad.

Reviews praise Di Vittorio: “Top billing goes to Di Vittorio’s completion of the Violin Concerto that the 24-year-old Respighi left unfinished in 1903”-Gramophone Magazine (London); “Unabashedly tonal, traditional, and Italian, his style employs a great deal of chromaticism but also has a swelling lyricism”-American Record Guide; “A brilliant and sparkling semi-pastiche overture and two symphonies, which are pictorial-philosophical, using many of the significant tropes of late Romantic and neo-Romantic music from Mahler to Barber, to create very tonal, approachable works distinguished by his very Respighian sense of orchestral color”-Records International; “[Di Vittorio] is a composer of beautiful music extraordinaire.”-Fanfare Magazine (New Jersey); “[The Violin Concerto] sounds like genuine Respighi, with anticipations of characteristic moments in Pines of Rome”–Classics Today (New Hampshire); “his revisions, transcriptions and completions  are sensitive to Respighi’s Neo-Baroque style”–Music Web International (London); “Respighiana…[is] a happy and very lively score”–David’s Review Corner (Cambridge); “di Vittorio proves more and more to be an important Italian composer…one can also find hints of Scarlatti and Rossini…in his music…[he] has composed an album of assured popularity”–Qobuz (Paris); a modernism that is resolutely neo-romantic, as well as verismo, even cinematographic…without concerns of criticism from the avant-garde…Respighiana, entwined with Rossini crescendos and fanfares alla Pines, is a contemporary music entirely timeless"–Abeillemusique (Paris); “a musician of remarkable attainment…in his two short symphonies, he emerges as a composer of prodigious imagination and talent” – Houston Public Radio/NPR (Texas). Other reviews include The Guardian, Daily Telegraph, Northern Echo and Classic FM Magazine (London), Sacramento Bee, Strings Magazine, San Francisco Classical Voice and Arts San Francisco Observer (California), Buffalo News, America Oggi and New Music Connoisseur (New York), L’Informazione (Bologna), Ducale Music (Varese), La Repubblica (Rome), Il Mediterraneo and Giornale di Sicilia (Palermo), and La Nazione (Florence).

Born in Palermo, Italy, Salvatore Di Vittorio studied composition with Ludmila Ulehla and (conducting with) Giampaolo Bracali at the Manhattan School of Music, and aesthetics (and ancient) philosophy at Columbia University in New York. He is a protégé of Francesco Carotenuto (Conservatory of Music “S. Cecilia”, Rome), Piero Bellugi (Conservatory of Music “L. Cherubini”, Florence), and John Farrer (Royal College of Music, London). A member of the Manhattan School of Music Alumni Board Council, Di Vittorio has taught at Adelphi University and Loyola School in New York City. His compositions are published by Edizioni Panastudio in Italy. Recordings of his music are available on the Naxos and Panastudio labels. He resides in New York and Palermo.

For Media Files, visit: About the Orchestra
For more information, visit: www.SalvatoreDiVittorio.com
"Potrait of The Maestro
Salvatore Di Vittorio"
Watercolor painting, 2007
by Jeffrey Ingram Stone

On the occasion of the Chamber Orchestra of NY's Debut at Carnegie Hall - October 11, 2007
"A poignant and lyrical musical spirit respectful of the ancient Italian tradition”
- Luigi Verdi, Accademia Filarmonica di Bologna
Soundclip: Di Vittorio, Overtura Respighiana
Chamber Orchestra of New York, S. Di Vittorio (conductor)
Naxos, 8.572333