PARISOT, ALDO Aldo Parisot, long acknowledged as one of the world's master cellists, has
led the career of a complete artist, as concert soloist, chamber musician, recitalist,
and teacher. He has been heard with the major orchestras of the world, including
Berlin, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Rio de Janeiro, Munich, Warsaw,
Chicago, Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh, under the batons of such eminent conductors
as Stokowski, Barbirolli, Bernstein, Mehta, Monteux, Paray, de Carvalho, Sawallisch,
Hindemith, and Villa-Lobos. As an artist seeking to expand his instrument's
repertoire, he has given first performances of numerous works for cello, written
especially for him by such composers as Carmago Guarnieri, Quincy Porter, Alvin
Etler, Claudio Santoro, Joan Panetti, Ezra Laderman, Yehudi Wyner, and Heitor
Villa-Lobos, whose Cello Concerto No. 2, written for and dedicated to
him, was first given by Aldo Parisot in his New York Philharmonic debut. Since
then he has appeared with the Philharmonic on nearly a dozen occasions. He created
a sensation when he introduced Donald Martino's Parisonatina al'Dodecafonia
at Tanglewood.
He was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Music from Shenandoah University in
1999, and honoured as an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from Penn State University
in 2002, with the Award of Distinction from the Royal Northern College of Music
in Manchester, England, in 2001. A Yale faculty member since 1958, Aldo Parisot
was named the Samuel Sanford Professor of Music at Yale in 1994 and received
the Gustave Stoeckel Award in 2002.
|