Program Books/Twelfth Night: All’Italiana

Twelfth Night
All’Italiana

Sunday, November 9, 2025, 3pm
Hertz Hall

David Belkovski, harpsichord and direction
Rachell Ellen Wong, violin and direction
Shelby Yamin, violin
Andrew Gonzalez, viola
Andrew Koutroubas, cello
Adam Cockerham, theorbo
Nicoletta Berry, soprano

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About the Performance


The unparalleled wellspring of inspiration throughout Baroque Europe was undoubtedly Italy. Desperate to breathe the same air, taste the same food, and hear the same music, composers such as George Frideric Handel rushed to Rome, Venice, Florence, and Naples early in their careers. Those without the means, or whose employers would not allow the time off, absorbed what they could by poring over score after Italian score, as did Johann Friedrich Fasch. Others, like Georg Philipp Telemann, were content to let their imaginations run wild, fusing fashionable Italian music with the rigor of German technique. Throughout this afternoon’s program, All’Italiana, these three Teutonic figureheads collide with trailblazing icons from the North and South of Italy, respectively Venice’s Antonio Vivaldi and Naples’ Francesco Durante.

Vivaldi naturally takes top billing on any program highlighting Italian influence. The overture to his 1724 opera Il Giustino shows his keen sense of dramatic timing, opening with sharp stops and starts that jolt the audience to attention. A bittersweet middle movement, with its aching violin line, offers a brief moment of repose before giving way to a rustic, almost martial finale.

Known for pursuing a “mixed taste” throughout his life’s work, Telemann strove for a cosmopolitan style that could appeal to French, Italian, and German musicians alike. Yet his A minor sonata in four parts shows no such pretensions; it is unabashedly Italian. Contemporary manuscripts and catalogues even reveal his youthful infatuation with Italy by way of his playful anagrammatic pseudonym, Georgio Melante. The sonata opens with a haunting, disjunct refrain that passes restlessly from one instrument to another, followed by a gigue-like movement (ironically, a dance Italians had borrowed from the English), which is suddenly cut short by more unsettled, haunting music. The mood is appropriately set for Handel’s unforgettable aria of profound melancholy, “Se vago rio,” composed during the composer’s Roman visit in 1708. Here the accompaniment undulates in a Sicilian rhythm, at once a backdrop for the voice and reflection of the protagonist’s subconscious. The sonata recommences with brusque, declamatory chords followed by a tumbling, restless finale.

Unable to find his way to Italy, Fasch was forced to admire from afar. His D minor sonata is even more à la mode than Telemann’s, balancing learned imitation with sumptuous textures. The opening movement is dark and lyrical, followed by a second that shifts between lively instrumental conversation and what sound like playful shouting matches. The third turns to France with the sumptuous ouverture-like rhythm, before morphing into a miniature violin concerto. The finale unleashes a whirlwind of counterpoint, this time purely for raucous, theatrical effect.

Plucked from his seemingly bottomless output, Vivaldi’s E minor concerto for violin showcases traits of the Italian style that became notorious abroad, namely, startling harmonies and a penchant for surprise and effect above all else. The first movement is a case study in Italian audacity, veering abruptly across the emotional spectrum. The second is a master class in sustained tension, built on little more than a throbbing accompaniment and a desperate violin line. By the third movement, the chromatic turbulence of the earlier music breaks loose, underpinned by a rumble that can only be described as a seismic event.

The centerpiece of the program is Handel’s cantata Armida abbandonata, written during his formative years in Italy. The work draws on the legend of Armida, the sorceress from Torquato Tasso’s epic Gerusalemme liberata, who falls in love with the crusader Rinaldo only to be abandoned by him. Handel seizes on her moment of betrayal, giving voice to her anguish in a single-voiced cantata of striking intensity. Written in Rome at a time when opera was routinely suppressed, the cantata offered Handel an outlet to experiment with operatic drama in miniature. Its virtuosic demands and searing emotional range foreshadow the great operatic heroines of his later career.

The true beating heart of Italy was, of course, Naples, the largest European city along the Mediterranean at the time. Here, Durante reigned supreme as a composer of both instrumental and sacred music, as well as a pedagogue who trained countless 18th-century superstars. His G minor concerto opens with a movement marked “affectionately,” immediately revealing the operatic vocality that pervades his slow music, despite his lack of interest in staged works. The second movement begins without pause or preparation—a brilliant use of elision that showcases Durante’s dramatic flair—careening and whipping all instruments into a frenzy. This energy paves the way for Handel’s showstopping “E un foco quel d’amore,” drawn from his Venetian triumph Agrippina. A gentle return to Durante anticipates Mozart and the elegance of the Classical era, again marked “affectionately.”

The program closes with Handel’s “Al dispetto di sorte crudele,” a playfully defiant and joyful outpouring of vocal and instrumental virtuosity.
David Belkovski

We move now into one of the busier times of the year, when schedules begin to fill up with special events and holiday celebrations that bring together a host of family, friends, and colleagues. I’m so happy that you’ve chosen to spend part of this time here with us at Cal Performances. We enjoy seeing you in our halls at any time of the year, but particulary during the crowded days of November and December.

It’s particularly meaningful that we begin the month with a special tribute to the late tabla master and a longtime friend of Cal Performances, Zakir Hussain, as Chicago’s brilliant Third Coast Percussion and tabla virtuoso Salar Nader continue a collaboration initiated with the music legend before his passing late last year. Besides my profound amazement at his imagination, virtuosity, and sheer physical stamina, I was always struck by Zakir’s humor and humility. His warmth was immediate, and his enthusiasm for music and performance was infectious. I know I speak for many in the community when I say that Zakir will be dearly missed.

As spending time with family is particularly meaningful at this time of year, I’m happy to draw your attention to four programs with appeal for audience members of all ages: the Bay Area premiere of Sadler’s Wells’ extraordinary kung fu-infused Sutra, a thrilling collaboration between Belgian choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, sculptor Antony Gormley, composer Szymon Brzóska, and 20 Buddhist monks from the Shaolin Temple in China’s Henan Province; a crowd-pleasing all-Strauss program with the legendary Vienna Boys Choir; a special screening of Disney’s beloved animated classic Moana, accompanied by an ensemble of top Hollywood studio musicians, Polynesian rhythm masters, and guest vocalists; and a special Thanksgiving weekend trip down the rabbit hole with the mesmerizing—and ever-popular—dancer-illusionists of MOMIX in Alice, a wild and fantastical take on Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland.

The month also features offerings by the exceptional Twelfth Night early-music ensemble led by violinist Rachell Ellen Wong and harpsichordist David Belkovski; the virtuoso pianist and Cal Performances favorite Jeremy Denk in a highly anticipated recital of Bach’s complete partitas for solo keyboard; and a return visit by the supremely inventive visual storytellers of Manual Cinema with the Bay Area premiere of The 4th Witch, a Cal Performances-commissioned and meticulously crafted, gloriously handmade production inspired by Shakespeare’s Macbeth.

Coming up in the new year, our 2025–26 season will continue with a wide range of talent including conductor Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra; vocalists Joyce DiDonato and Renée Fleming; the Takács String Quartet; early-music superstars The English Concert, Jordi Savall, and The Tallis Scholars; jazz greats Cécile McLorin Salvant and Somi; and appearances by Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens and Broadway diva Kelli O’Hara.

And our acclaimed dance series continues, distinguished by genre-defining artists and major new productions including the Martha Graham Dance Company celebrating its centennial; The Joffrey Ballet in an otherworldly celebration of the traditional Scandinavian summer solstice festival; the long-awaited Cal Performances debut of A.I.M by Kyle Abraham; and, of course, return engagements with the Mark Morris Dance Group and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

As you explore the calendar, I recommend you pay particular attention to our Illuminations theme of Exile & Sanctuary,” focusing this season on how issues of displacement can inform bold new explorations of identity and community; and how artistic expression can offer safe harbor during times of unrest or upheaval.

The opportunity to engage with diverse artistic perspectives and share the transformative power of the live performing arts is one of life’s greatest pleasures, and I look forward to encountering these profound and entertaining experiences with you in the months ahead.

Jeremy Geffen

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

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