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Building on a career as a Baroque recorder player and flutist,
Giovanni Antonini became the conductor of the ensemble
Il Giardino Armonico. With that group and others, he has applied historical-performance practices to repertory extending into the Romantic era.
Antonini was born in 1965 in Milan. He studied the flute at the Civica Scuola di Musica and became interested in the recorder and in historical performance at the Centre de Musique Ancienne in Geneva, one of the first generation of programs in the field. He and a group of other students formed the Baroque orchestra
Il Giardino Armonico in 1985, aiming to broaden awareness of historically informed performance practices.
Antonini emerged as a leader of the group and began to conduct it in 1989. Under his direction, the group has concertized widely and collaborated with artists from both the historical-performance field (
Christophe Coin,
Giuliano Carmignola) and the mainstream (
Katia and
Marielle Labèque,
Viktoria Mullova). A series of successful recordings on the Teldec label in the 1990s and early 2000s, specializing in
Vivaldi and
Bach, raised the group's profile, and by the 2010s, it was among the few early historical-performance ensembles that had continued to flourish.
The Vivaldi Album (2000), with
Cecilia Bartoli, earned a Grammy Award, and
Antonini has won several ECHO Klassik awards and a variety of other honors.
Around 2005,
Antonini began to conduct 19th century repertory as well, often applying insights gained from Baroque performance. This has gained him invitations to conduct various outside groups. Many of his recordings of symphonic repertory have been with the
Basel Chamber Orchestra in Switzerland, but he has also led the
Berlin Philharmonic (at the invitation of
Simon Rattle) and many other major orchestras in Europe and North America, including the
Los Angeles Philharmonic. In the 2000s and 2010s,
Antonini has emerged as an important operatic conductor, leading
Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro at the La Scala company in his hometown as well as performances of Bellini's Norma (in a new version), starring
Bartoli, with
Il Giardino Armonico. In 2019,
Antonini conducted
Handel's Giulio Cesare in Egitto at La Scala.
Many of
Antonini's efforts in the 2010s have been absorbed by large recording projects for Classical-period instrumental music, including complete cycles of Beethoven's symphonies with the
Basel Chamber Orchestra for the Sony Classical label and a new "Haydn 2032" project with the same group, pairing
Haydn's symphonies with little-known works by his contemporaries.
Antonini has grown more and more prolific as his career proceeds. In 2020 alone, he issued four new albums, including two in the "Haydn 2032" series and two albums for the Alpha label, one, a set of Vivaldi flute concertos where he played and conducted, and the other, the experimental
What's Next Vivaldi?, featuring violinist
Patricia Kopatchinskaja.