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Schubert-Tag Sternath. Chang. Hagen. Carrel. Baillieu. Brauß. Katzenberger Matinee

Date & Time
Sun, Mar 23, 2025, 11:00
On March 26, 1828, the first anniversary of Beethoven's death, Franz Schubert held his first and only public concert featuring his own works in Vienna. The program included his song "Auf dem Strom," the grand E-flat major Piano Trio D 929, along with other songs and chamber music. The concert featured celebrated local artists, much like this performance with "spring" talents surrounding pianist Lukas Sternath. This includes Schubert's late E-flat major Piano Trio, known for its heavenly lengths.

A summary from original text in German | Read the original

Keywords: Morning Concert, Musikfestival, Vocal Music

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Hana ChangViolin
Julia HagenCello
Lukas SternathPiano
Kieran CarrelTenor
James BaillieuPiano
Elisabeth BraußPiano
Kristian KatzenbergerHorn

Program

Franz SchubertAuf dem Strom D 943
Franz SchubertRondo für Violine und Klavier h-Moll D 895
Claude DebussySonate für Violoncello und Klavier d-Moll
Franz SchubertKlaviertrio Es-Dur D 929
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Last update: Tue, Mar 4, 2025, 24:06

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Schubert-Tag Sternath. Chang. Soulez Larivière. Hagen. Duerden. Carrel. Baillieu. Brauß Soiree: Forellenquintett

Sun, Mar 23, 2025, 18:00
Hana Chang (Violin), Sào Soulez Larivière (Viola), Julia Hagen (Cello), Will Duerden (Contrabass), Lukas Sternath (Piano), Kieran Carrel (Tenor), James Baillieu (Piano), Elisabeth Brauß (Piano)
Schubert's meditative "Nachtstück" for piano trio opens a program that explores time and timelessness. Debussy's Préludes and Violin Sonata, Steve Reich's eight-part "Cello Counterpoint" (played here on the viola), and Helmut Lachenmann's playful Schubert Variations offer complementary perspectives to early Romantic Viennese ideas. The concert concludes with two timeless Schubert masterpieces: the "Grand Rondeau" for piano four hands and the famous "Trout Quintet". The concert will have two intermissions.