Draft:Festival Vara Magica

  • Comment: Of the three citations currently used on the page, only the LiterNet citation appears to be a valid independent review of a Vara Magica performance. The other two citations appear to be program announcements placed by the festival itself. More independent coverage is needed. WikiDan61ChatMe!ReadMe!! 19:51, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
  • Comment: The referencing is a mess, please see WP:REFB for advice on correct referencing using inline citations and footnotes. DoubleGrazing (talk) 18:04, 20 July 2023 (UTC)

Vara Magica Festival ["Summer Magic" Festival] is a classical music festival held in Romania since 2012.[1] It takes place in Bucharest, at the Romanian Athenaeum, during July-August, between the regular Romanian Philarmonic Orchestra season and George Enescu Festival. The festival features both young artists from various National Youth Orchestras, as well as well-known Romanian and international classical music soloists[2], such as Alexandru Tomescu, Alexander Sitkovetsky or Elena Moșuc, and experienced orchestras, such as the George Enescu Philharmonic Orchestra. The typical schedule of Vara Magica Festival includes, on average, 8-12 concerts scattered all over the summer holiday.

2022 edit

The eleventh edition took place between July 06-August 31. The festival debuted with the Romanian Youth National Orchestra, conducted by Cristian Mandeal, and summed up 9 summer evening concerts. The festival stage was honored by 5 orchestra concerts (national and international orchestras), and acclaimed soloists Josef Špaček, Octavian Lup, Valentin Șerban - winner of the grand prize in the Violin final of the 2020/2021 George Enescu International Competition, Sînziana Mircea, Laura Tătulescu, Alexandru Tomescu, Rebekka Hartmann, and Alexander Sitkovetsky. The edition ended with the National Youth Orchestra of France.

2023 edit

The twelfth edition took place between July 05-August 23. The festival debuted with Violoncelissimo 100, conducted by Cristian Mandeal, and summed up 8 summer concerts. The festival stage was honored by 4 European doublebass maestros Andreas Ehelebe, Felix Leissner, José Trigo, Stanislau Anishchanka, Maria Marica - winner of 2022 George Enescu International Competition Violin Section, Sînziana Mircea,[3] and Alexander Sitkovetsky. The edition ended with Alexandru Tomescu and the Cameral Orchestra of George Enescu Philarmonic.

References edit

  1. ^ Matei, Ana (2015). "Dacă ai nevoie de puțină magie". AnaMatei.ro.
  2. ^ "Portret aniversar în festival". RepublicaKritica. 2021.
  3. ^ Frandes, Marcel (2023). "Aproape o fantezie - Recital de pian Sînziana Mircea". Liternet.

External links edit