Bella Italia

Bella Italia

Saturday, March 28, 2026 | 7:30 PM

Sunday, March 29, 2026 | 3:00 PM

The Granada Theatre

Concert Duration: Approximately 90 minutes including a 20-minute Intermission

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A four-century survey of Italian classics. From Vivaldi’s perennial The Four Seasons, to Puccini’s youthful Capriccio Sinfonico (an early working of tunes to later appear in La Bohème!), to Respighi’s thunderous The Pines of Rome, surrounding you with the sounds of brass fanfares. And discover a recent, lively concerto by Cristian Carrara inspired by the dazzling Red Ferrari Accordion.

Watch Music & Artistic Director Nir Kabaretti share his vision for this concert and why audiences will be captivated.

The Artists

Nir Kabaretti, conductor

Hanzhi Wang, acccordion

Repertoire

VIVALDI | “Winter” from The Four Seasons

CRISTIAN CARRARA |  Red Ferrari Accordion Concerto
(receiving its US premiere, co-commissioned by Santa Barbara Symphony, Orchestra della Toscana, Musica Insieme – Bologna, Richmond Symphony Orchestra & FVG Orchestra)

PUCCINI | Capriccio Sinfonico

RESPIGHI | The Pines of Rome

Hanzhi Wang, Accordion

Acclaimed for her “staggering virtuosity,” Hanzhi Wang is the only accordionist to ever win a place on the roster of Young Concert Artists in its 63-year history. An ambassador for her instrument, Hanzhi has been praised for her captivating stage presence and performances that display passion and finesse.

A groundbreaking artist, Hanzhi’s achievements include being named Musical America’s “New Artist of the Month.”

Hanzhi became the first solo accordionist to be featured on New York WQXR’s Young Artists Showcase, and releasing the Naxos label’s first-ever solo accordion CD, On the Path to H.C. Andersen, which was nominated for the prestigious DR (Danish Radio) P2 Prize in 2019.

As the First Prize Winner of the 2017 YCA Susan Wadsworth International Auditions, Hanzhi made her New York debut at Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall and her Washington, DC debut at the Kennedy Center, opening the 40th Anniversary Young Concert Artists Series, co-presented with Washington Performing Arts. She holds the Ruth Laredo Prize and Mortimer Levitt Career Development Award for Women Artists of YCA.

Hanzhi won First Prize in the 40th Castelfidardo International Accordion Competition in Italy and continues to inspire the next generation of accordionists through lectures, performances, and masterclasses at prestigious institutions worldwide. Composers such as Martin Lohse, James Black, and Sophia Gubaidulina have written and dedicated works to her.

Her recent performances include recitals at UC Santa Barbara’s Lively Arts, Stanford Live, Bravo! Vail, and the Krannert Center. As a chamber musician, she has performed at Tanglewood, and with YCA alum Steven Banks at The Morgan Library & Museum. Hanzhi has also appeared as a soloist with orchestras including the Oregon Music Festival Orchestra, Reno Chamber Orchestra, Erie Philharmonic, Victoria Symphony, and the Hawaii Symphony.

In the 23-24 season, she performed on a coast-to-coast tour with mandolinist Avi Avital, including a performance presented by the New York Philharmonic. This upcoming season, Hanzhi will perform at Caramoor, LongHouse Reserve, Market Square Concerts (Harrisburg, PA), Arizona Friends of Chamber Music (Tucson, AZ), Norton Center (Danville, KY), The Mansion at Strathmore, and Grand Concerts (Tabernash, CO). Hanzhi will debut a new work by Nina Shekhar in a commission led by YCA which is set to premiere with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and will premiere a new work written for her by Katherine Balch at London’s Wigmore Hall.

Hanzhi earned her Bachelor’s degree at the China Central Conservatory of Music and completed her Master’s degree and Soloist Diploma at the Royal Danish Academy of Music.

Cristian Carrara, composer

Cristian Carrara has been hailed as one of the most important composers of his generation. He mainly writes symphonic and chamber music, but also works for musical theatre and television.
Critics recognize in his production a writing that is “very attentive to the balance and delicacy of the harmonic texture”, but “great in creative intent so that the whole context is very solid and terse,” capable of revealing, beyond the curtain of an apparently ‘simple’ music, the terrible question about the nefarious results of what is well-proclaimed, that is, of what war, every war, entails.” (Claudio Strinati)

“His music is close to the heart, it is clear but not simple, it is direct but speaks a language full of mystery: that of poetry.” (Elena Formica)

“He is an author who has a great ease of writing” (Giorgio Battistelli), and the happy relationship with the public is well-described by the American critic Rob Haskins: “I know that I would like to share his music with others and listen more and more, many times”.

“Unlike so much music today, his crypticism is not in the handwriting, but in the difficulty of organizing and making his compositional thought as clear as possible, a bit like what happens in Verdi’s music, which has a minimal semiological charge, but a very violent semantic charge.” (Flavio Emilio Scogna).

Cristian Carrara’s works have been commissioned, performed, and recorded by leading ensembles, and soloists throughout the world, including John Neschling, Omer Meir Wellber, Jan Latham Koenig, Nir Kabaretti, Lior Shambadal, Flavio Emilio Scogna, Roberto Prosseda, Francesca Dego, Danusha Waskiewicz, Robert De Maine, Sonia Prina, Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Filarmonica Toscanini di Parma, Orchestra della Toscana, Filarmonica della Fenice, Orchestre Symphonique et Lyrique de Nancy, Qatar Symphony Orchestra, Berliner Symphoniker, Slovenian Philarmonic, Santa Barbara Symphony, Orchestra de la Unam of Mexico City, Orchestra del Teatro Municipal de Sao Paulo, Ra’anana Symphonet, Israel Symphonet.

Among his theatrical works: “La piccola vedetta lombarda”, “Oliver Twist”, “Alto sui pedali” and “Il giocatore”. In the symphonic catalog: “Magnificat Meditation for pedal piano and orchestra” (commission from Emilia Romagna Festival), “Destinazione del sangue,” “Liber Mundi,” “Tales from the underground,” “Ondanomala” (commission from Teatro Lirico di Trieste), “Vivaldi: In memoriam” (commissioned by Maggio Musicale Fiorentino). As for chamber music, the most performed works include “Luce,” “Bianco,” “Ludus,” and the collection of piano pieces, “A piano diary.”

August 2015 was the premiere of “War Silence” for piano and orchestra (commissioned by the Ravel-o Festival), with the Filarmonica di La Fenice di Venezia. In January 2016, Francesca Dego and Robert Demaine, with the Santa Barbara Symphony Orchestra, premiered “Machpela,” a double concerto for violin, cello, and orchestra, which had a great reception in its Californian premiere. His viola concerto “The Waste Land” received its premiere in July 2016 with violist Danusha Waskiewicz and the Slovenian Philharmonic. Mr. Carrara composed a violin concerto, “Luci Danzanti nella notte,” for Francesca Dego, which premiered in January 2020 with the Filarmonica Arturo Toscanini.

With over 18,000 spectators and 28 performances, in October 2016, it was the premiere of “Cenerentola,” a new opera commissioned by Fondazione Teatro Petruzzelli di Bari.

Mr. Carrara 2021 season included, moreover, the premieres of “4 emotions,” for flute and string orchestra (commissioned by Emilia Romagna Festival), “Flower in the desert,” for contralto and orchestra (commissioned by Israel Sinfonietta) and the the new Opera “Rapimenti d’amore,” commissioned by Teatro Coccia di Novara and based on the Dante Alighieri’s life.

The rich record production, published in monographic and collective CDs by Warner Classics, Tactus, Arts Records, Incipit, Stradivarius, reflects the attention to a compositional inspiration fed by multiple levels of cultural investigation, capable of exploring both the great themes of the journey of man (“Liber Mundi”) as well as the secret miniature of the gift of self (“A piano diary”) and the mixture of genres (“Ludus”). In October 2015, a new symphonic album (“Magnificat”) was released for Brilliant, recorded with the Orchestre Symphonique et Lyrique de Nancy. In the first months of 2017, however, “Faust in the Sky” was released for Warner Classics, recorded by I Solisti Aquilani and directed by Marco Attura.

As Artistic Director of Fondazione Pergolesi Spontini and Artistic Coordinator of Orchestra della Toscana, Cristian Carrara is Composition Professor at the Conservatorio di Musica di Sassari.

Nir Kabaretti

is The Santa Barbara Symphony's world-renowned Music & Artistic Director
Nir Kabaretti has worked with some of the world’s most sought-after musicians. Some of his most well-known collaborators include Lang Lang, Placido Domingo, Joyce Di Donato, Angel Joy Blue, Vadim Repin, Gilles Apap, Hélène Grimaud, and André Watts.

Nir Kabaretti

is The Santa Barbara Symphony's World-Renowned Music & Artistic Director
Nir Kabaretti has worked with some of the world’s most sought-after musicians. Some of his most well-known collaborators include Lang Lang, Placido Domingo, Joyce Di Donato, Angel Joy Blue, Vadim Repin, Gilles Apap, Hélène Grimaud, and André Watts.

A very warm and special thank you
to our 2025/26 season donors and the sponsors making
this event possible!

Concert
Sponsors
Principal Concert Sponsor
Montecito Bank & Trust
Artist Sponsors
Susan Aberle
Rachel Kaganoff
Selection Sponsors
Susan & Adam Berger
Mark & Shelley Bookspan

Wallin Studios

2025/26 Concert Season Sponsors

Corporate Season Sponsor

Grand Venue Sponsor

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