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Francesca Dego

Violinist Francesca Dego has been identified with extreme virtuoso repertory, but after signing with the Deutsche Grammophon label, she has also gained attention for a survey of Beethoven's sonatas for violin and piano. Dego is one of the few violinists who has been allowed to play "Il Cannone," Paganini's favorite violin, which is owned by the city of Genoa. Dego was born in Lecco, Italy, on March 17, 1989. Her father, Giuliano Dego, was an Italian journalist and amateur violinist, and her mother, Margaret Straus, was an American of Jewish background; her training encompassed both Italian and American elements. Dego took up the violin, studying with her father, at age four. By the next year, she had already won admittance to California's Fairbanks School of Performing Arts. Dego made her debut at seven in San Diego with an all-Bach concert. At nine, she met violinist Daniele Gay, who became her primary teacher. After graduating from the Milan Conservatory in 2006, she moved to the Royal College of Music in London for a master's degree, which she received in 2010. Dego's style has also been shaped by instruction from Salvatore Accardo and Shlomo Mintz. An early recording of Dego playing Beethoven was used in the 2004 film The Gerson Miracle, which won the Palme d'Or at the Beverly Hills Film Festival that year. Signed to Deutsche Grammophon in 2012, Dego released a recording of the 24 Caprices of Paganini, a composer in whose work she has specialized. Dego gave a concert with Mintz and the Israel Sinfonietta at 16, and since then, she has collaborated with the likes of Roger Norrington, Christopher Hogwood, and Xian Zhang, among others. In 2014, Dego participated in a "Violinists of Hope" concert in Rome together with 12 violinists and one cellist survivor of the Holocaust; the concert was broadcast on Italy's national RAI network. The winner of a range of international prizes, in 2008, Dego became the first Italian woman since 1961 to make the final round in the Paganini Prize competition in Genoa. In 2015, Dego married conductor Daniele Rustioni. Dego co-founded the Gravedona Chamber Music Festival on Italy's Lake Como in 2018. In the mid-2010s, she embarked on a cycle of Beethoven violin sonatas, issued as a box set by Deutsche Grammophon in 2019. In 2017, Dego released her concerto debut, featuring the Violin Concerto No. 1 in D major, Op. 6, of Paganini, and the relatively neglected Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 26 (1943), of Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari. The conductor was Rustioni, leading the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. She has since released Suite Italienne (2018), an exploration of 20th century Italian styles in the music of Italy and beyond, and in 2021, she returned with Il Cannone, playing a favored violin of Paganini that has been owned since his death by the city of Genoa and has rarely been allowed to be played. Dego turned to Mozart in the early 2020s, releasing albums of his violin sonatas, violin concertos, and piano quartets on Chandos with various chamber music partners. In 2024, she returned on Chandos with a recording of the violin concertos of Brahms and Busoni, joining the BBC Symphony Orchestra and conductor Dalia Stasevska.
© James Manheim /TiVo

Discography

19 album(s) • Sorted by Bestseller

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