Joseph Puglia
Joseph Puglia
Violin, Play-Conduct
Joseph Puglia is managed worldwide by Leontien van der Vliet.
Contact:
E: leontien.vandervliet@interartists.nl
T: +31 6 5 24 68 707
Highlights 2024
Voices of the Violin:
This program explores how a violin’s own personality influences our musical experiences. This project will connect composers directly with audience members. It is a series of new commissioned works, completed in 2023 and to be performed in the season 24-25
Deep Listening sessions: Joseph Puglia has been researching the work of Pauline Oliveros. His research focuses on how we hear and interpret sound, and the interaction people have by listening together in a live concert setting. In 2024 he realised a concert format for music faculties, which shows how we create meaning in music. Composition students can make creations, along with pioneering works by Oliveros, John Luther Adams, James Tenney, Cornelius Cardew and Milton Babbitt. Joseph is also researching how active audience participation can create deeper musical connections in concerts, through the music of Pauline Oliveros and others.
Reviews
“He came on stage, arranged his sheet music on his stand, looked around peacefully and nodded to the conductor: well, let’s begin, all as if he were just sitting with you at your kitchen table. And with that exact same attitude, he played Ligeti’s virtuoso piece, a piece of cake in Puglia’s hands. Breathtaking.”
“Joseph Puglia’s substantive interpretation of this violin repertoire comes from very deep within. [...] Mindblowing.”
“Puglia plunged with gusto into the demanding, complex solo part. He played in the rough, aggressive manner that much of the music demanded. Yet the soloist also brought a ghostly tone to eerie procession of high notes. Puglia achieved a huge tone as his bow swept across the strings in rapid arpeggios, drawing enough power to stand up to the massed forces of the orchestra.”
“Last Thursday [Joey Roukens’] new violin concerto “Roads to Everywhere”, written for Joseph Puglia and Asko|Schoenberg, was performed in the Muziekgebouw aan’t IJ. It could not have been written by anyone else. Sections flow over each other organically and in a dance-like manner. […] Puglia played it with fire and to great effect.”