Erica Boschiero´s Performance-Lesson in TU
10/15/2010 - 15:00 - 15:00
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The 10th annual “Week of the Italian Language in the World” will be
celebrated in Tallinn on the 15th of October 2010 with a performance-lesson
and concert by the young Italian singer and songwriter, Erica
Boschiero. The performance-lesson will take place at 14.15 in auditorium
S-422 (TU Silva building, Narva Road 29) and the concert will be held at
19.00 in The House of the Brotherhood of Blackheads (Pikk 26).Both events
are free and are open to the public!Erica Boschiero was born in 1983 in a
small mountain village in Italy near the Austrian border. She studied piano
for four years before moving to the guitar and teaching herself to sing. In
2002, she recorded her first album, “Piccole storie d’Africa”, in
collaboration with other artists under the guidance of Guisto Pio
(arranger for Frank Battiato). In 2003, she recorded 3 albums for
children entitled “Parole da fare”. She is a songwriter,
storyteller and lover of traditional music from the Veneto area of
Italy. In 2008, she was the winner of the Prix d’Aponte (national
competition for song-writers where she also won the award for the
“best lyrics” by the SIAE, the Italian Society of Authors and
Publishers). She won the 2009 Botteghe d’Autore’s Prize and was a
finalist in other songwriters’ awards. In 2007 she recorded “ Dietro
ogni crepa di muro”, her first solo album. This year, the Week of the
Italian Language will be presenting the project called “Porta Parola –
The Italian Language in Music”. The project intends to promote young and
talented Italian singers and songwriters, who appreciate the Italian
language and are using music as an instrument to show the richness of the
Italian language. The protagonists of this project are mainly young
emerging singers and songwriters, who are capable of communicating more
directly with the communities abroad and are able to offer a fresher image
of today’s Italy. The artists of the new generation have developed a
culture that in recent years has, on the one hand deepened the studies of
language and on the other hand, deepened the studies of music in search of
a synthesis. Furthermore, almost all the singers and songwriters have a
repertoire of traditional songs in their own dialect, that go side by side
with the ones in the Italian language.
celebrated in Tallinn on the 15th of October 2010 with a performance-lesson
and concert by the young Italian singer and songwriter, Erica
Boschiero. The performance-lesson will take place at 14.15 in auditorium
S-422 (TU Silva building, Narva Road 29) and the concert will be held at
19.00 in The House of the Brotherhood of Blackheads (Pikk 26).Both events
are free and are open to the public!Erica Boschiero was born in 1983 in a
small mountain village in Italy near the Austrian border. She studied piano
for four years before moving to the guitar and teaching herself to sing. In
2002, she recorded her first album, “Piccole storie d’Africa”, in
collaboration with other artists under the guidance of Guisto Pio
(arranger for Frank Battiato). In 2003, she recorded 3 albums for
children entitled “Parole da fare”. She is a songwriter,
storyteller and lover of traditional music from the Veneto area of
Italy. In 2008, she was the winner of the Prix d’Aponte (national
competition for song-writers where she also won the award for the
“best lyrics” by the SIAE, the Italian Society of Authors and
Publishers). She won the 2009 Botteghe d’Autore’s Prize and was a
finalist in other songwriters’ awards. In 2007 she recorded “ Dietro
ogni crepa di muro”, her first solo album. This year, the Week of the
Italian Language will be presenting the project called “Porta Parola –
The Italian Language in Music”. The project intends to promote young and
talented Italian singers and songwriters, who appreciate the Italian
language and are using music as an instrument to show the richness of the
Italian language. The protagonists of this project are mainly young
emerging singers and songwriters, who are capable of communicating more
directly with the communities abroad and are able to offer a fresher image
of today’s Italy. The artists of the new generation have developed a
culture that in recent years has, on the one hand deepened the studies of
language and on the other hand, deepened the studies of music in search of
a synthesis. Furthermore, almost all the singers and songwriters have a
repertoire of traditional songs in their own dialect, that go side by side
with the ones in the Italian language.