Amour du Tango vol. I | Carretta, Coruzzi, Ziliani

Amour du Tango vol. I
Carretta, Coruzzi, Ziliani

30/05/2026 - 21:30



PLEASE NOTE: In case of rain, the available seats for attending the event are sold out.
For evening concerts only, a waiting list is available, which will be activated should the event be confirmed outdoors. Please contact our boxoffice for further information.

 

Cesare Carretta, violin

Andrea Coruzzi, accordion

Nicola Ziliani, double bass

 

J. S. Bach (1685-1750)

Corale BWV 147

J. Ventura (1960)

A la gran Muneca

A. Villildo (1861-1919)

El Choclo

G. Rodriguez (1897-1948)

La Cumparsita

A. Piazzolla (1921-1992)

Histoire du Tango, Adios Nonino, Chiquilin de Bachin, Inverno Porteño, Oblivion, Escualo

R. Galliano (1950)

Tango pour Claude

A. Bixio (1896-1978)

Tango delle Capinere

E. Morricone (1928-2020)

Indagine su un cittadino

A. Coruzzi (1998)

Tango para mi hermana

 

30’ | Ticket offered by Oficina OCM and Gruppo Tea

PLEASE NOTETickets can only be reserved and collected at the Trame Sonore Festival Box Office

 

Cesare Carretta, Andrea Coruzzi, and Nicola Ziliani invite the audience on a magnetic journey through the passion of tango and the evocative power of great cinema, hosted in the extraordinary and evocative Piazza Leon Battista Alberti. Through the vibrant dialogue between violin, accordion, and double bass, immortal classics by Ventura, Villoldo, and Rodríguez come to life, featuring milestones such as El Choclo and La Cumparsita.

The beating heart of the concert is the tribute to Astor Piazzolla: in works such as Oblivion, Adiós Nonino, and Invierno Porteño, music becomes both nostalgia and fire, revealing the most authentic and revolutionary soul of Buenos Aires.

The program is enriched by the cinematic tension of Ennio Morricone and the modern touch of Richard Galliano, alongside the distinctly Italian flavor of Tango delle Capinere. Within this sonic narrative, which also includes an original composition by Coruzzi himself, the trio transforms each piece into an overwhelming encounter where popular energy and instrumental elegance merge into a single, profound embrace.

Text by Antonio Pio Caliendo