Set your preferred locations for a better search. You can sign up here.

Érard-Festival – Benefizkonzert

Date & Time
Sun, Sep 22, 2024, 11:00
The grand final concert of the 8th Érard-Festival will take place this year at the Recital Hall of the Elbphilharmonie. Eight young pianists will perform masterpieces from the Romantic period and subsequent eras at the matinee organised by the Érard Society. The proceeds from the charity concert will go in equal parts to the Junior Sailing League team and the Ukrainian sailors of the North German Regatta Association (NRV). With their musical skills, the young piano virtuosos make it possible... Read full text

Keywords: Recital

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Yiyi FanPiano
Mira Ilenia PreuPiano
Chuang LiangPiano
Philipp PakendorfPiano
Adina GottwaldPiano
Ruka SakazakiPiano
Yfang RongPiano
Zihan XuPiano

Program

Zehn Variationen G-Dur über »Unser dummer Pöbel meint« KV 455Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
»Waldesrauschen« aus: Zwei Konzert-Etüden S 145Franz Liszt
Scherzo Nr. 4 E-Dur op. 54Frédéric Chopin
Ballade Nr. 2 h-Moll S 171 »Héro et Leander«Franz Liszt
Rigoletto: Paraphrase de concert S 434Franz Liszt
Pour le pianoClaude Debussy
Das Geisterschiff / Sinfonische Ballade auf ein Gedicht von Moritz von Strachwitz op. 1Carl Tausig
Après une lecture de Dante / Fantasia quasi SonataFranz Liszt
Give feedback
Last update: Sat, Nov 23, 2024, 10:27

Similar events

These events are similar in terms of concept, place, musicians or the program.

Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Wed, Sep 11, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Sophia Jaffé (Violin), Niklas Schmidt (Cello), Stepan Simonian (Piano), Fabio Witkowski (Piano), Gisele Witkowski (Piano), Ralph Evans (Violin), Efim Boico (Violin), Gil Sharon (Viola)
The title of the evening alludes to Proust’s novel cycle »In Search of Lost Time«. The sonata by the fictional composer Vinteuil, whose »little phrase« reminds the novel’s character Charles Swann of his love Odette de Crécy, poses the riddle of who the real-life inspiration behind the Vinteuil Sonata is. The name César Franck is often mentioned. Whether the little phrase really comes from Franck’s violin sonata will remain forever unclear. What is certain, however, is that Franck created one of the most beautiful works in the genre with his Sonata in A major.
Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Sat, Sep 14, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Ron Selka (Clarinet), Sophia Jaffé (Violin), Anna Kreetta Gribajcevic (Viola), Cyprien Katsaris (Piano), Stepan Simonian (Piano), Ralph Evans (Violin), Efim Boico (Violin), Gil Sharon (Viola), Niklas Schmidt (Cello)
Friends, patrons, spouses, clergy and royalty were often the recipients of musical dedications. Mozart’s Trio in E-flat major bears a dedication to his piano pupil Franziska von Jacquin. The premiere took place in the Jacquins’ home, with Anton Stadler on the clarinet, Franziska on the piano and Mozart himself on the viola. An unusual instrumentation at the time, which proved to be a stroke of luck in chamber music. Prokofiev’s Five Melodies are a reworking of the Five Songs Without Words, which he dedicated to the soprano and personal friend Nina Koshetz. Ysaÿe dedicated each of the six solo sonatas to a different colleague, the fifth to his pupil Matthieu Chrickboom. But not every dedication is well received: César Franck wrote the dedication »To my good friend Camille Saint-Saëns« on the score of his Piano Quintet in F minor. Although Saint-Saëns played the piano part at the premiere, he was unable to do anything with the work and demonstratively left the sheet music on the piano at the end of the performance. Not a good start for a composition that is now regarded as a masterpiece from Franck’s later creative period.
Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Mon, Sep 16, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Ralph Evans (Violin), Efim Boico (Violin), Gil Sharon (Viola), Niklas Schmidt (Cello), Cyprien Katsaris (Piano)
The great opera composer Giuseppe Verdi, who opens this concert evening, called his only string quartet »a gimmick«. Legend has it that he composed his quartet purely as a pastime, as rehearsals for performances of his »Aida« in Naples had come to a standstill. As so often, Verdi was understating the case. The French-Cypriot pianist Cyprien Katsaris continues the gimmick with a spontaneous improvisation on Verdi’s operatic themes. In the rest of the programme, Katsaris plays romances, songs and fantasies by Robert Schumann, Felix Mendelssohn and Franz Liszt. Cyprien Katsaris is a piano virtuoso with a very special affinity for Liszt and has contributed greatly to a new view of Liszt’s piano works throughout his life. In 2023, he received the Franz Liszt Prize of Honour, awarded by the Klassik Stiftung Weimar and the Neue Liszt Stiftung.
Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Tue, Sep 17, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Matthias Lingenfelder (Violin), Hartmut Rohde (Viola), Frans Helmerson (Cello), Jan Talich (Violin), Roman Patočka (Violin), Radim Sedmidubský (Viola), Michal Kaňka (Cello), Ralph Evans (Violin), Efim Boico (Violin), Gil Sharon (Viola), Niklas Schmidt (Cello)
It’s about joy and happiness, about love and longing, and also sometimes about difficult and sad things. In short, it is about everything that comes directly »from life«. Bedřich Smetana’s String Quartet No. 1 forms the overarching theme of this multi-layered concert evening. Two composers from Hamburg are represented in this programme: Johannes Brahms has the last word with his String Sextet in B-flat major, while his much lesser-known compatriot Ferdinand David appears with his Sonata for violin solo op. 43. The Saxon city of Leipzig became the centre of life for the composer and violinist David, who taught Joseph Joachim, the violin legend who also inspired Brahms, at the Leipzig Conservatory.
Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Fri, Sep 20, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
André Cazalet (French horn), Michel Lethiec (Clarinet), Jean-Louis Capezzali (Oboe), Matthias Lingenfelder (Violin), Hartmut Rohde (Viola), Frans Helmerson (Cello), Arto Noras (Cello), Oliver Triendl (Piano), Jan Talich (Violin), Roman Patočka (Violin), Radim Sedmidubský (Viola), Michal Kaňka (Cello)
Mikhail Glinka’s »Divertimento brillante« dates from a time when Glinka was living in Italy and saw the world premiere of Bellini’s bel canto opera »La Sonnambula« at La Scala in Milan. The melodic material comes from this opera, Glinka’s Divertimento consists of just one long movement with a brilliant finale, from which the work undoubtedly takes its name. The first half of the concert focuses on Finland’s musical heritage, including »Don Juanquijoten Virtuoosinen Pöytämusiikki« (The Virtuoso Table Music of Don Quixote) by Aulis Sallinen, which was written to celebrate the 70th birthday of cellist Arto Noras and premiered by Noras in Helsinki in 2012. Noras himself also performs this work here in Hamburg. In Janáček’s »Moravian Folk Poetry in Songs«, the stage belongs entirely to the strings of the Czech Talich Quartet, while Dohnányi’s Sextet, Op. 73 forms the finale, a work composed entirely in the spirit of late Romanticism, yet also infected by the zeitgeist: with a kind of ragtime for clarinet and piano in the finale.
Artistic depiction of the event

International Mendelssohn Festival 2024

Sun, Sep 22, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Michel Lethiec (Clarinet), Jean-Louis Capezzali (Oboe), Carlo Colombo (Bassoon), André Cazalet (French horn), Niklas Schmidt (Cello), Michael Rieber (Double bass), Hartmut Rohde (Viola), Jens Bomhardt (Double bass), Jan Talich (Violin), Roman Patočka (Violin), Radim Sedmidubský (Viola), Michal Kaňka (Cello)
This concert marks the end of the 10th edition of the International Mendelssohn Festival and presents a »colourful series« of musical treasures. It begins with Schubert’s monumental Octet for mixed winds and strings, which, in his own words, is already »on the way to becoming a great symphony«. The Duetto for cello and double bass by Giaochino Rossini is less well known. The three-movement piece in D major is a true duo: both voices are almost equal and talk to each other. Everyone first associates Puccini with opera; his song »Storiella d’amore« is performed on stage as an arrangement for clarinet and string quintet. Also included: George Gershwin’s world-famous »Rhapsody in Blue« for clarinet, string quartet and double bass, which promises a colourful array of rhythms and harmonies from jazz and blues. Finally, a crowning finale that unites all the evening’s musicians: a world premiere by Fredrik Schwenk, »Bunte Reihe, einmal wohltemperiert«, a fantasy about the number 24 for 12 instruments.
Artistic depiction of the event

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Festival

Mon, Apr 29, 2024, 19:30
Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (Hamburg)
Mitglieder des Philharmonischen Staatsorchesters Hamburg, Elise van Es (Soprano), Hansjörg Albrecht (Harpsichord), Hansjörg Albrecht (Piano)
»I feel air from other planets« – so begins a poem by Stefan George, the poet who once stood for such an admired departure into modernity that a composer like Arnold Schönberg set some of his poems to music early on. Schönberg and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach were both avant-gardists in the best sense of the word. Both shared an emotional, technical, but also idealistic connection to the traditions from which they came. And both sought the development of art and artistic expression as a reflection of their time, developing a new musical language in the process. Schönberg (born in 1874) turned towards expressionism and later towards atonality, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (born in 1714) towards an enlightened understanding of music and as a pioneer and trailblazer for the music of Viennese Classicism. And as Arnold Schönberg and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach are both celebrating milestone birthdays this year, the Carl-Philipp-Emanuel-Bach-Choir Hamburg congratulates them with this concert.