Thank you for your interest in attending the Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino (CGS) event hosted by the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA) at Stanford University.
We regret to inform you that the Thursday night (May 21, 8pm) performance has been cancelled.
If you purchased tickets for this performance, you will receive a full refund for the tickets and any add-ons. An email with refund details and additional important information will be sent to you shortly at the address on file with CardinalPay.
We appreciate your understanding and hope that you will join us for future CESTA events.
NOTICE OF CANCELLATION
CANZONIERE GRECANICO SALENTINO (CGS)

Blending their mastery of tradition and unprecedented innovation, Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino (CGS) transports global audiences on a journey of communal discovery, exploring the rhythms, movements, and instrumentation that collectively define the Pizzica tradition. World renowned among folk ensembles, CGS brings centuries of Southern Italian folk song, dance, and ancient ritual to life in a thoroughly modern way.
Canzoniere Grecanico Salentino (CGS) was founded in 1975 by writer and cultural activist Rina Durante and continues unmatched in both artistry and influence under the direction of visionary musician and composer Mauro Durante. Over its 50 year tenure, CGS has played a pivotal role in reawakening, reinterpreting, and sharing the unique musical heritage of Salento’s Pizzica on a global scale. This performative tradition is linked to the Taranta, or spider bite—a ritual rooted in communal healing manifested through ecstatic music and dance. By translating the sensory experience of this ancient mythology into an inclusive, universal narrative, CGS delivers a new musical tradition that resonates with audiences worldwide.
WEBSITE canzonieregrecanicosalentino.net
INSTAGRAM @canzonieregs
VIDEO YouTube Channel
MUSIC CGS on Spotify





CESTA is committed to shaping future humanities research and teaching through an openness to new digital technologies, scholarly questions, and collaborative opportunities.
CESTA is delighted to host CGS at Stanford this May, bringing together diverse artistic, intellectual, geographic, and cultural communities to celebrate their extraordinary 50-year journey as musical stewards and bold innovators.
CESTA is an internationally renowned digital humanities center based in Wallenberg Hall at Stanford University. Now in its 15th year, CESTA has, from its inception, combined emerging digital methodologies and tools with traditional research methods of analysis and interpretation in textual, visual, and spatial analysis. In partnership with the Stanford Humanities Center, CESTA serves as the hub of an international network of fellows, visiting scholars, students, and alumni. Through collaborations with scholars and students across campus, across the Americas, and across the world, our research investigates pressing questions about human culture, history, experience, and endeavor. The projects and labs hosted by CESTA explore places, global spaces, texts, textual artifacts, data visualization, digital curation, preservation and display, linked data and interoperability, and sustainability. As a scholarly community CESTA supports and encourages cutting-edge work across the humanities and the interpretative social sciences.
CESTA is committed to collaborative, open, inclusive, and ethical scholarship. We seek to set a standard for best practices in all our endeavors. We encourage experimentation, flexible thinking, and productive risk-taking in the pursuit of excellence in digital research. Through our major research projects, fellowship and assistantship programs, seminars, workshops and informal initiatives, CESTA is dedicated to nurturing, training and professionalizing scholars of the future from a variety of disciplines, who will learn how to ask and answer data-driven questions focused on cultural, environmental, historical, social, and textual issues.
CESTA’s expansion and growth to support this variety of new projects, research groups, events and training programs is possible thanks to the support of the Dean of Humanities and Sciences, the Office of the Provost as well as that of the President, the Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, and the Vice Provost for Graduate Education. In addition to the possibilities unlocked for us by internal and external grants, we are deeply grateful for the generous gifts of our donors.
VISIT
Wallenberg Hall
Building 160, Fourth Floor
450 Jane Stanford Way
Stanford, CA 94305-2055
LEARN
cesta.stanford.edu