Tuesday 6 December 2011

Venice New Year's Eve 2012 Live Stream Fireworks San Marco Square, Fenice Concert

Venice New Year's Eve 2012 Live Stream Fireworks San Marco Square, Fenice Concert

Every New Year’s Eve in Venice is celebrated in San Marco Square by couples, families, friends and singles and the party to mark the passing of 2011 into the new year of 2012 will be no different. A message of Love, tolerance and peace for the all world. Waiting for the New Year, San Marco Square will be animated by a stage which will host music, dances and fireworks. Celebrate La Festa di San Silvestro and Il Capodanno Venetian style, enjoying several courses of fantastic Italian meal in a local restaurant, drinking prosecco and joining the masked throng in St Mark's Square for midnight, where the bell of St. Mark's campanile announces the beginning of a new year.

The celebration continues through the night with professional fireworks display along the waterfront. Add to all of this the magic of the traditional New Year's Concert at the Fenice Theater, the most famous in Italy. The first part as always will be orchestral, the second with soloist participation and choir will be more mellodramatique and will conclude like all New Year Concerts at the Fenice in Venice with the choir " Va´pensiero" from Nabucco and the brindisi "Libiam ne´ lieti calici" from Verdis - La Traviata.

Teatro La Fenice ("The Phoenix") is an opera house in Venice, Italy. It is one of the most famous theatres in Europe, the site of many famous operatic premieres. Its name reflects its role in permitting an opera company to "rise from the ashes" despite losing the use of two theatres (to fire and legal problems respectively). Since opening and being named La Fenice, it has burned and been rebuilt twice more. Piazza San Marco is the principal public square of Venice, Italy, where it is generally known just as "the Piazza". All other urban spaces in the city are called "campi" (fields). The Piazzetta is an extension of the Piazza towards the lagoon in its south east corner. The two spaces together form the social, religious and political centre of Venice and are commonly both considered together. This article relates to both of them.

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