Bruno Aprea began his musical career as a pianist after studying under his father, Tito Aprea, at the Conservatoire of S.Cecilia in Rome. He met with considerable success at a very young age, paving the way to a career on the international concert circuit. He played on numerous occasions with the Accademia di S.Cecilia Orchestra (Beethoven’s 2nd and 5th Concertos, Franck’s Symphonic Variations), with the RAI Orchestra of Rome, Milan and Turin (Schumann and Bartok’s 3rd Concerto) under the direction of C. Dutoit, P. Maag, etc. On his debut at the Deutsche Staatsoper in Berlin, under the direction of Otmar Suitner, the “Der Morgen” critic had this to say: “…a superb execution with which the young virtuoso Bruno Aprea introduced himself to Berliners. This Beethovian interpretation was so solid, innervated and distinct from the first to the last note that one’s mind naturally wandered to his fellow countryman, the great Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli. Seldom have we heard the Concerto in B flat so sparkling, vibrant, crystal-clear and totally free of forcing. The Berlin audience acclaimed the young talent with a deafening ovation”.
After making several tours of Italy, Germany and Holland, in 1968 he played at RAI in Rome under the direction of Sergiu Celibidache Mozart’s Concerto in E flat for two pianos and orchestra, in duo with his father Tito. This performance was released on record by Fonit Cetra.

At the end of the 1960s, in tandem with his concert schedule, he attended conducting courses under Franco Ferrara at the S.Cecilia Conservatoire in Rome and the Accademia Chigiana in Siena. In 1970 he interrupted his piano concert schedule to make his conducting debut at the Two Worlds Festival in Spoleto, conducting The Medium, directed by the work’s author, Menotti. It was indeed Menotti that recommended Aprea as conductor for the Rigoletto staged in Amsterdam. This marked the beginning of his conducting activity, mainly in the symphonic sphere. Teodoro Celli, writing in “Il Messaggero”, wrote of his debut as conductor at the Accademia di S.Cecilia in 1971: “We experienced a similar emotion in 1948, listening to an unknown at La Scala: Guido Cantelli”, while Giulio Confalonieri, writing in “Il Giorno” after his Milan debut, stated: “He is a rising star in the conducting world”.

In 1977 at the Tanglewood Festival (US), he won the Koussevitsky Prize, awarded to him by a Panel including Leonard Bernstein and Seiji Ozawa, becoming the second Italian conductor to win this prize, after Claudio Abbado in 1958. His work took him all over Europe, South America, South Africa and Israel. He conducted at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, in a Gala evening with Mirella Freni and in a number of concerts at the Opera of Monte Carlo, including one in aid of Unesco, broadcast in Eurovision in 1979. In Italy he conducted all the main symphonic orchestras: RAI of Rome, Milan, Turin and Naples, at the Fenice (Venice), Comunale (Bologna), etc. and numerous concerts at the Accademia di S. Cecilia in Rome. He toured in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Romania. In Israel, invited by Shlomo Mintz, he conducted the Israel Chamber Orchestra of Tel Aviv, in South Africa the SABC of Johannesburg, in Brazil, invited by Eleazar de Carvalho, the Orquestra Sinfonica of Sao Paolo. He also conducted the Philarmonia Hungarica, the Presidential Symphonic Orchestra of Ankara and the Bilbao Symphonic Orchestra.

He has worked with soloists such as: N. Magalof, A. Ciccolini, L. Berman, the Kontarsky brothers, D. Ciani, J.Achucarro, R. Orozco, Z. Kocsis, D. Ranki, J.Y. Thibaudet, F. Thiollier, W. Shnaideran, S. Gazzelloni, and so on. Up until the early 1980s his conducting work was chiefly symphonic in nature, making occasional forays into the operatic sphere. But after success at the Deutsche Opera of Berlin in 1983 with Madame Butterfly (the "Der Tagesspiegel" wrote: "The most profound impressions came from the orchestra"), this activity grew considerably. From 1985 to 1995 he became a regular guest of the Cape Town Opera, where he staged a large number of productions: Verdi's Othello, with Jon Vickers, The Barber of Seville, Don Carlo, Turandot, Lucia di Lammermoor, Il Trovatore, Madame Butterfly. In the US he conducted operas in Philadelphia (Don Pasquale), Cincinnati (Il Trovatore and Lucia di Lammermoor), Baltimore (L'Elisir d'Amore, with Carlo Bergonzi making his last stage appearance), Denver (Don Giovanni), Palm Beach (Don Giovanni and Lucia di Lammermoor), Portland (Tosca, La Favorita, Don Carlo, La Traviata), Columbus (La Fanciulla del West and Rigoletto). He then went on to conduct in Tokyo in 1990 (Don Giovanni and Madame Butterfly), in the United Kingdom at Leeds and Manchester (La Bohème), in Ireland at the Wexford Festival, Mascagni's Iris, in Ankara (Othello, Ballo in Maschera, La Bohème), in Pretoria, South Africa, in 1999 (Rigoletto, Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci). In Italy he conducted at the Rome Opera (Don Pasquale and Cenerentola), at the Fenice of Venice (La Bohème), at the S.Carlo of Naples in 1999 (Cavalleria Rusticana), at the Petruzzelli of Bari (Elisir d'Amore, Nozze di Figaro, Verdi's Othello in 1998), at the Festival of Ravenna (Fanciulla del West), at the Festival of Martina Franca (Il Bravo di Mercadante, Rossini's La Pietra di Paragone, Puccini's Le Villi), at the Bellini Festival of Catania (Capuleti e Montecchi and I Puritani), at Messina in 1998 (Rossini's La Gazza Ladra), at Treviso and Rovigo (I Puritani, Lucia di Lammermoor, Werther, Gluck's Orfeo ed Euridice, La Bohème), at the Teatro Sperimentale of Spoleto (Sonnambula, Cenerentola, La Traviata), at Novara (Madame Butterfly, Macbeth), at Cagliari (Norma), at Sassari (Il Turco in Italia), at the Festival of Lille and Teatro Piccinni of Bari (Paisiello's Barber of Seville), at the Opera Giocosa of Savona (Tosca in 1997, Madame Butterfly in 1998, La Bohème in 1999, Cavalleria Rusicana and Zanetto by Mascagni 2003).

In the 2001-2002 season he met with great success conducting Mascagni's Le Maschere to mark the centenary of its first staging during an extended Italian tour. At Jesi in 2001 he presented the first modern-day staging of Lauro Rossi's Domino Nero, at the Todi Festival 2001 La Traviata, and in November 2002 L'Elisir d'amore at the Teatro Verdi in Trieste.

Bruno Aprea is dedicated to symphonic and opera music in equal measure. His symphonic repertoire ranges from Beethoven's nine symphonies to Stravinsky's Le Sacré du Printemps. From Haydn, Debussy and the historical vanguard of the 20th century to all the major compositions of Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Mahler, etc. Always keen to include less well-known pieces, he has often conducted rarely played works including: Beethoven's Christus am Ölberg, Mendelssohn's Die erste Walpurgisnacht, Bruckner's Nullte Symphony, Tchaikowsky's Manfred, and so on, or less well-known composers such as Janacek and Ives.

To celebrate Goffredo Petrassi's (the leading living Italian composer) 80th birthday he conducted the 8th Concerto and Follia d'Orlando at the Teatro dell'Opera in Rome. Ten years later, for the composer's 90th birthday, Il Cordovano (Petrassi's only opera) was staged at the Teatro Valli of Reggio Emilia, presented together with M. De Falla's Retablo de Maese Pedro.

More recent symphonic activities include: Beethoven's 9th symphony on tour with the Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia, Brahm's Deutsches Requiem on the occasion of the commemoration of Gianandrea Gavazzeni, the concert based on Petrassi's music conducted at the Quirinale in Rome attended by the President of the Italian Republic, Mahler's 1st Symphony at the Mediterranean Festival, Villa Adriana, Tivoli, and at Villa Rufolo, Ravello, in the summer of 2002.

His operatic repertoire includes practically all the major operas of Rossini, Donizetti, Bellini, Verdi, Puccini and Mascagni and the major works of Mozart, Gluck and the French school. He has also recorded on CD a number of rare operas for Nuova Era, Bongiovanni and Kicco such as Mercadante's Il Bravo, Lauro Rossi's Il Domino Nero, Rossini's La Pietra del Paragone, Puccini's Le Villi, Mascagni's Le Maschere and recently "Zanetto" by Mascagni has been released on DVD.

With a total of around 100 new productions he has worked with many famous directors and stage designers.

Since 1978 he has held the teaching post of Orchestra Conducting, which had been held by his maestro Franco Ferrara at the Conservatoire of S.Cecilia in Rome. Over the past 25 years many of Italy's best modern-day conductors have studied there with him. He also gives Master Classes in Conducting at the Arts Academy of Rome, at the "Joven Orquestra Nacional de Espana" and at the "Fundacion Eutherpe" in Leon (Spain).

During the past years he has also been invited to conduct several productions with the "Simon Bolivar" Orchestra of Caracas. Since the beginning of 2005 he has been nominated principal conductor of the Symphonic Orchestra of Bari.

Biografia incompleta - ferma al 2005 - In fase di aggiornamento.

 

Bruno Aprea a 9 anni suona per la RAI

Bruno Aprea a 20 anni dopo il suo primo concerto con l'Orchestra dell'Accademia di S. Cecilia (Franck: Variazioni Sinfoniche. Direttore: Franco Mannino).

Attività con l’Orchestra dell’Accademia di S. Cecilia inizialmente come giovane Pianista, poi come Direttore.

Critica di Erasmo Valente


Concerti straordinari a prezzi popolari (1962-1963) - Roma Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 14/10/1962
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Franco Mannino, pianoforte: Bruno Aprea
  • Beethoven Sinfonia n. 1 in do maggiore op. 21
  • Franck Variations symphoniques, in fa diesis minore, per pianoforte e orchestra
  • Strauss Also sprach Zarathustra, poema sinfonico op. 30

Stagione estiva 1964 - Roma Basilica di Massenzio

  • Rappresentato il : 11/08/1964
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Luciano Rosada, pianoforte: Bruno Aprea
  • Rossini Le siège de Corinthe: Ouverture
  • Beethoven Concerto n. 5 in mi bemolle maggiore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 73 "Imperatore"
  • Mortari Arioso e toccata (La strage degli innocenti), per orchestra
  • Debussy La mer, per orchestra

Stagione Sinfonica 1967-1968 - Roma Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 08/11/1967
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Peter Maag, pianoforte: Bruno Aprea
  • Mozart Die Zauberflöte: ouverture
  • Beethoven Concerto n. 2 in si bemolle maggiore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 19
  • Schumann Sinfonia n. 2 in do maggiore op. 61

Concerti dedicati a giovani interpreti e compositori 1970 - Roma Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 16/05/1970
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Desző Ránki
  • Brahms Tragische Ouvertüre, in re minore op. 81
  • Schumann Concerto in la minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 54
  • Vándor Dance Music, per orchestra
  • Mendelssohn Sinfonia n. 5 in re maggiore op. 107 "La Riforma"

Stagione estiva 1971 - Roma. Basilica di Massenzio

  • Rappresentato il : 03/08/1971
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Nikita Magaloff
  • Busoni Berceuse élégiaque, per orchestra, op. 42
  • Schumann Concerto in la minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 54
  • Falla El amor brujo, suite dal balletto
  • Strauss Don Juan, poema sinfonico op. 20

Stagione estiva 1976 - Roma. Basilica di Massenzio

  • Rappresentato il : 22/07/1976, 23/07/1976
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Mario Delli Ponti
  • Martucci Giga, per pianoforte, op. 61 n. 3
  • Martucci Notturno per pianoforte op. 70 n. 1
  • Čajkovskij Concerto n. 1 in si bemolle minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 23
  • Prokof'ev Romeo e Giulietta, suite n. 2, op. 64-ter
  • Falla El sombrero de tres picos: suite n. 2

Stagione Sinfonica 1977-1978 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 06/11/1977, 07/11/1977
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, violino: Carlo Chiarappa
  • Brahms Serenata in re maggiore per orchestra op. 11
  • Prokof'ev Concerto n. 1 in re maggiore per violino e orchestra op. 19
  • Prokof'ev Suite scita, per orchestra, op. 20

Stagione Sinfonica 1978-1979 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 10/12/1978, 11/12/1978
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Rafael Orozco
  • Castiglioni Eine kleine Weihnachtmusik, per orchestra da camera
  • Prokof'ev Concerto n. 2 in sol minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 16
  • Mendelssohn Sinfonia n. 10 in si minore per archi
  • Mendelssohn Sinfonia n. 4 in la maggiore op. 90 "Italienische"

Stagione Sinfonica 1979-1980 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 02/03/1980, 03/03/1980
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, violino: Pina Carmirelli
  • Britten The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, per orchestra, op. 34
  • Pizzetti Concerto in la per violino e orchestra
  • Šostakovič Sinfonia n. 1 in fa minore op. 10

Stagione estiva 1981 - Roma. Piazza del Campidoglio

  • Rappresentato il : 23/07/1981, 24/07/1981
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: James Tocco
  • Beethoven Leonore III, ouverture in do maggiore op. 72a
  • Beethoven Concerto n. 3 in do minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 37
  • Falla El amor brujo, suite dal balletto
  • Respighi Feste romane, poema sinfonico

Stagione estiva 1983 - Roma. Piazza del Campidoglio

  • Rappresentato il : 14/07/1983, 15/07/1983
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • Coro dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • Duo Gorini-Bagnoli
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, maestro del coro: Giulio Bertola
  • Mendelssohn Die Hebriden, ouverture op. 26 "Fingalshöhle"
  • Mendelssohn Concerto in mi maggiore per due pianoforti e orchestra
  • Mendelssohn Die erste Walpurgisnacht, cantata per coro e orchestra op. 60

Stagione Sinfonica 1984-1985 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 10/03/1985, 11/03/1985, 12/03/1985
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Massimiliano Damerini
  • Ives Orchestral set no. 1: Three places in New England, per orchestra
  • Castiglioni Fiori di ghiaccio, per pianoforte e orchestra
  • Mahler Sinfonia n. 1 in re maggiore

Stagione estiva 1986 - Roma. Piazza del Campidoglio

  • Rappresentato il : 17/07/1986, 18/07/1986
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, violoncello: Frans Helmerson
  • Dvořák Concerto in si minore per violoncello e orchestra op. 104
  • Čajkovskij Sinfonia n. 5 in mi minore op. 64

Stagione Sinfonica 1988-1989 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 14/01/1989, 15/01/1989, 16/01/1989, 17/01/1989
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, pianoforte: Aldo Ciccolini
  • Mozart Sinfonia n. 38 in re maggiore K. 504 "Praga"
  • Mozart Concerto n. 23 in la maggiore per pianoforte e orchestra K. 488
  • Mendelssohn Sinfonia n. 5 in re maggiore op. 107 "La Riforma"

Stagione Sinfonica 1989-1990 - Roma. Auditorio Pio

  • Rappresentato il : 03/12/1989, 04/12/1989, 05/12/1989
  • Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
  • direttore: Bruno Aprea, viola: Alfonso Ghedin, pianoforte: Dimitris Sgouros
  • Cambissa Concerto per viola e orchestra
  • Čajkovskij Concerto n. 1 in si bemolle minore per pianoforte e orchestra op. 23
  • Čajkovskij Manfred, sinfonia in si minore op. 58