Gabriele Baldocci

Gabriele Baldocci (born May 10, 1980 in Livorno, Italy) is an Italian pianist.

Baldocci is known worldwide for performing with the legendary Argentinean pianist Martha Argerich [1][2]

After studying with Ilio Barontini, Franco Scala, William Grant Naboré, and Sergio Perticaroli and having studied with or having been coached by Alicia De Larrocha, Leon Fleisher, and Dmitri Bashkirov at the International Piano Academy Lake Como, Baldocci began an intense solo career performing in important venues worldwide (Tonhalle in Zurich, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, Sala Verdi in Milan). His large repertoire ranges from Bach to contemporary music and is especially focused on the composers of the Romantic Period such as Fryderyk Chopin (of whom he has recorded the complete Ballades and Impromptus), Franz Liszt,[3] and Robert Schumann.[4] In 2012 he began recording and performing the complete Beethoven Symphonies transcribed by Liszt for piano solo.[5][6]

Very active as a chamber musician, he has performed with Ivry Gitlis, Marco Fornaciari, Mark Drobinsky, and other great names of the international music scene. Baldocci has toured extensively in duo with Martha Argerich, his personal good friend and mentor.

Since 2008 he has formed a stable piano duo with the Argentinean pianist Daniel Rivera. They have performed at important music Festivals around the world.

Since 2010 he has been artistic director and Ambassador of the Martha Argerich Presents Project (MAPp), an ambitious project launched by Argerich to encourage cooperation between famous artists and young talented musicians in order to create a worldwide circuit of performances and pedagogy.

More recently, Gabriele Baldocci has advanced his career as a conductor,[7] collaborating with important orchestras in Europe and America, and he cultivates his interest for cinema producing and directing short and feature movies.[8]

Baldocci is a Piano Professor at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance [9] after six years spent at the Potenza Conservatory of Music.[10]

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