Predrag Gosta

Predrag Gosta (Cyrillic: Предраг Госта) is a Serbian-American conductor and harpsichordist.[1]

Life and career

Gosta was born in Belgrade, Serbia, on 14 January 1972. He was educated at the Belgrade Music Academy, London's Trinity College of Music, and Georgia State University in Atlanta. He is the Artistic Director of an early music ensemble, baroque orchestra and choir New Trinity Baroque,[2] based in Atlanta, United States, the Music Director and conductor of the Gwinnett Ballet Theatre[3] in Duluth (metropolitan Atlanta), the Principal Guest Conductor of the New Europe Symphony Orchestra in Bulgaria,[4] and the President of the international early music society Early Music Network.[5] From 1991 to 1996 he was the Artistic Director of the Studio for Early Music Belgrade and the Belgrade International Early Music Festival, since its renewal in 2012.[6] Between 2008 and 2009 he was the Assistant Conductor of the National Philharmonic[7] in Washington, D.C.. Since 2010 he is the President of the Makris Foundation[8] in Washington D.C. He is also an Artistic Advisor and U.S. Director of Peter the Great Music Academy in St. Petersburg, Russia.[9] Since 2013 he is the Artistic Director of the Belgrade Baroque Academy,[10] together with the famous Serbian contralto Marijana Mijanovic, and since 2014 of the New Belgrade Opera.[11] In 2015 he became the Music Director of the New Symphony Orchestra of Belgrade,[12] which now bears the name of the Greek-American composer Andreas Makris.[13]

Predrag Gosta has recorded several critically acclaimed CDs, including [14] recording of Henry Purcell's opera Dido and Aeneas with British soprano Evelyn Tubb. Other musicians he collaborated with include British violinist John Holloway, Baroque harpist Andrew Lawrence-King, lutenists Anthony Rooley and Michael Fields, the Dutch recorder virtuoso Marion Verbruggen, British harpsichordist Steven Devine, Polish mezzo-soprano Magdalena Wór and others. He was the affiliate guest lecturer at Georgia State University,[15] and choir professor and artist-in-residence at Oxford College of Emory University [16]

Discography

Album Orchestra/Ensemble Soloist(s) Label Release Year
Predrag Gosta: A Portrait London Symphony Orchestra, New Trinity Baroque, Makris Symphony Orchestra, et al. Evelyn Tubb, Thomas Meglioranza, Michael Fields, Carrie Krause, Adriane Post, Andrew Marriner, et al. forthcoming 2017
W.A. Mozart: Concertos for Violin and Piano Makris Symphony Orchestra Nataša Veljković, Milica Zulus forthcoming 2017
Predrag Gosta and London Symphony Orchestra: Orchestral Highlights (Music by Mussorgsky, Rachmaninov and Makris) London Symphony Orchestra Tomo Keller, Andrew Marriner, et al. Edition Lilac 2016
J.S. Bach: Violin Concertos New Trinity Baroque Carrie Krause, Adriane Post Edition Lilac 2016
Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition / Rachmaninov: Symphonic Dances London Symphony Orchestra Tomo Keller, et al. Edition Lilac 2016
Makris: Orchestral Works London Symphony Orchestra Andrew Marriner, et al. Edition Lilac 2015
Baroque Christmas (Concertos and Cantatas by Corelli, Torelli, Manfredini, Scarlatti, Buxtehude and Bernhard) New Trinity Baroque Kathryn Mueller, Wanda Yang Temko, Adriane Post, Carrie Krause, Martha Perry, Anna Griffis, André Laurent O'Neil Edition Lilac 2011
Vivaldi: Concertos New Trinity Baroque Carrie Krause, Daniela Giulia Pierson, Michael Fields, André Laurent O'Neil, Christina Babich Rosser Edition Lilac 2010
Handel: Arias New Trinity Baroque Leif Aruhn-Solén Edition Lilac 2010
Pergolesi: Stabat Mater New Trinity Baroque Evelyn Tubb, Terry Barber Edition Lilac 2008
Carissimi: Oratorios Jonas and Jephte New Trinity Baroque, Oxford Chorale Julia Matthews, Kevin Sutton Edition Lilac 2007
Charpentier: Messe de minuit / Handel: Organ Concertos New Trinity Baroque, Canterbury Choir Brad Hughley, Elizabeth Packard Arnold, Magdalena Wór, Brent Runnels, Patrick Newell Edition Lilac 2005
Purcell: Dido and Aeneas New Trinity Baroque Evelyn Tubb, Thomas Meglioranza, Julia Matthews, Elizabeth Packard Arnold, Allison A. Brown, Terry Barber, Kevin Sutton, Brad Fugate Edition Lilac 2004
Trio Sonatas & Chaconnas New Trinity Baroque EMN 2003
Il Pastor Fido (Balli e Balletti by Monteverdi and Marini) Ensemble of the Studio for Early Music Belgrade Gordana Kostic, Predrag Djokovic, Nenad Ristovic, Predrag Gosta, et al. STURAM 1996

Reviews

Piccolo Spoleto Festival 2011

"Each piece... was polished and sparkled like something new. The playing was technically elegant and warmed by loving interpretation infused with infectious personality..."

— CVNC: An Online Arts Journal in North Carolina, June 2011[17]

Bach's B-minor Mass

"...a thoughtful, energising exception that gave the B-minor Mass a fresh sound. Under New Trinity founder and conductor Predrag Gosta, they illuminated the various madrigal-like choruses and operatic arias with individual attention... Emotionally heartfelt... strong performance... Saturday night at St. Bartholomew's Episcopal, which was filled to capacity... It's a special pleasure to hear a student choir sing at a high level with enthusiasm and clarity of purpose. ...The four vocal soloists were often compelling, more so in duets with the fine instrumentalists... Conductor Gosta kept it all pushing forward... His tempos were not overly fast, but they felt fleet and he ended sections with a crisp cutoff — a very pleasant sensation. The Serbian-born harpsichordist and conductor is audibly gaining in interpretive heft, in parallel with his nascent conducting career, from the Gwinnett Ballet to concerts in Russia and Eastern Europe..."

— ArtsCriticAtl.com, March 2011[17]

Purcell's "Dido & Aeneas"

"...An excellent 2002 Edition Lilac recording [of Purcell's "Dido & Aeneas"] featuring Predrag Gosta leading the Atlanta-based Chorus and Orchestra of New Trinity Baroque... This is a wonderfully colourful yet always musical performance. It is what Noorman attempted but failed in the Parrott recording. Gosta's ensemble is excellent... the playing is so sensitive and secure. The choral work is excellent, too, with a true sense of character projected by the nameless witches, sailors, and attendants. This self-produced recording... is definitely well worth acquiring – a true sleeper... That's nine recordings of Dido and Aeneas and I haven't even scratched the surface. Which one is best? ...If I was forced to take one recording to a desert island, it would be the one by Lieberson and McGegan – but I would be sure to have Tubb with Gosta and Graham with Haim in my iPod."

— Early Music America magazine, Fall 2009[17]

References

External links

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