翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Stefano Guazzo
・ Stefano Guberti
・ Stefano Guidoni
・ Stefano Hatfield
・ Stefano Ianni
・ Stefano Impallomeni
・ Stefano Infessura
・ Stefano Ittar
・ Stefano Jacini
・ Stefano Kunchev
・ Stefano La Rosa
・ Stefano Lambri
・ Stefano Landi
・ Stefano Langone
・ Stefano Layeni
Stefano Lentini
・ Stefano Levialdi Ghiron
・ Stefano Lilipaly
・ Stefano Lippi
・ Stefano Locatelli
・ Stefano Lombardi
・ Stefano Lorenzi
・ Stefano Lorenzini
・ Stefano Lucchini
・ Stefano Luongo
・ Stefano Lusignan
・ Stefano Macaluso
・ Stefano Maderno
・ Stefano Madia
・ Stefano Magaddino


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Stefano Lentini : ウィキペディア英語版
Stefano Lentini

Stefano Lentini (born November 26, 1974) is an Italian composer and musician born in Rome, Italy. He is a part of this new generation of Italian composers who, in the field of soundtracks, have become the worthy hei to Rota, Morricone, Piovani. He practises his talent in cinema, television and theatre, and expresses himself in a wide field of styles. He is especially interested in non conventional scoring. He has just provided it with his ''Stabat Mater'', as seen in Wong Kar-wai’s The Grandmaster.
He composed the soundtrack for Grazing The Wall (Sfiorando il muro, 2012), selected at 69th Venice International Film Festival. Stefano’s television work has screened in Italy and around the world, and includes the Italian Series and TV Movies Braccialetti rossi, Non è mai troppo tardi, Bakhita, Drawn for Jury Duty (Il sorteggio), and the documentaries Skin Deep, Death at Dawn, Einer von Uns. Stefano was teacher at Roberto Rossellini National Institute for Film and Television (Rome) and at Master Colonne Sonore of Lizard Academy (Fiesole, Florence). He writes for Sound & Lite magazine. Stefano Lentini is represented in USA by The Gorfaine/Schwartz Agency.
He has released music and soundtracks of varying styles, from the electronic rock of Il sorteggio and the ethnic folk of ''Bakhita'' to the symphonic instrumentation of ''84 Urne''. Stefano Lentini collaborated to the soundtrack of The Grandmasters directed by Wong Kar Wai and premiered at Berlin International Film Festival on February 7, 2013. Lentini makes use of a variety of instruments,〔()〕 often playing many of them himself on the same track and writes music in various time signatures. He is considered part of the ''cross-chamber'' music, but his influences are very broad. His music has been likened to orchestral, ambient music, world music and aesthetically compared to the film music of Ennio Morricone and Alexandre Desplat. Lentini' music often has spiritual themes, and many songs draw inspiration from real stories.
==Biography==
Lentini' first instrument was the guitar, built by his grandfather with the doors of an antique wardrobe. Ever since he was young he dedicated himself to the composition and arrangement of music. He made his debut at the Folkstudio, a historic nightclub in Rome. He graduated with high honors in Cultural Anthropology and studied Ethomusicology in Rome and in London. He has collaborated with orchestras around the world: National Bulgarian Symphony Orchestra (BU), Orchestra di Roma (ITA), Mihail Jora Philarmonic Orchestra (RO), Digital Records Orchestra (ITA). His music is performed in Spain, Romania, Sweden, Ireland, Austria, Ukraine, Alaska, Mexico, USA and Poland.
A multi-instrumentalist, Stefano Lentini is known for his use of non-conventional tunes on guitar, but also plays electric bass, piano, drums, and several other instruments, often playing all of these on his albums through the use of multitrack recording. While in school, he studied the lute and flute, which he also plays on his albums. This multitude of instruments, including string orchestrations, figure prominently in his compositions, giving his music a symphonic sound.
Lentini currently lives in the countryside of Rome.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Stefano Lentini」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.