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

Guest performance in Fürth

Date & Time
Wed, Jun 21, 2023, 19:30
“In the rising of a symphony there is something divine, something similar to creation itself." (Leonard Bernstein) Life is in constant transformation and the world in constant change – and so, too, is the history of music! When eight-year-old Mozart composed his first symphonic work in 1764, the late baroque was transitioning to the classical era. The symphony was in the process of emancipating itself from its origins in the overture to Neapolitan opera. In this concert, our orchestra will... Read full text

Keywords: Symphony Concert

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Fabio BiondiConductor
Barbara BodeOboe

Program

Symphonie D-Dur KV 111/120Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphonie D-Dur »La tempesta di mare«Carlo Monza
Konzert für Oboe, basso continuo und Streichorchester D-DurGiovanni Battista Sammartini
Symphonie d-MollNiccoló Jommelli
Symphonie G-Dur KV 74Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphonie Nr. 1 c-Moll op. 11Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy
Give feedback
Last update: Fri, Nov 22, 2024, 12:39

Similar events

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

Artistic depiction of the event

Guest performance in Ottobeuren

Sun, Jul 23, 2023, 15:00
Jakub Hrůša (Conductor), Gerhild Romberger (Alto)
Late romantic confessions! Dvořák was keen to breathe fresh life into Catholic church music in his native Bohemia. For him, religiousness was a necessary prerequisite for his creative work, and he said: "Don't be surprised that I am so devout – an artist who is not devout will not achieve such things". As he grew older, the setting of liturgical texts became increasingly important for him – possibly as a way of expressing his thoughts about the end of life. He wrote his "Biblical Songs” in 1894, while living in New York. Shortly beforehand, news had reached him of the deaths of his contemporaries Tchaikovsky and Gounod, as well as the news from home that his father had passed away. These ten songs, which set texts from the Book of Psalms, range in expression from laments and prayers of intercession, fear and confidence to the praise of God and trust in his help – moving pieces written in a state of grief far from his beloved Bohemia. The concert will close with the musical volcanic eruptions and unforgettably catchy melodies of the popular D minor Symphony by César Franck, whom a contemporary once jokingly called a "modulation machine”. Like Dvořák, the Belgian-born composer was a strict Catholic. For many years he worked as an organist in Paris, developing a creativity all of his own as a composer – as attested by this symphony, which was first performed in 1889. The music portrays numerous struggles, but ends in inner triumph. Its final bars are solemn, majestic, proud – after all, it was said of Franck that “he knows himself to be one with God and trusts in the mission He has given him on earth.”