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International Composer Festival – Opening

Date & Time
Thu, Nov 14, 2024, 19:00
This year's International Composer Festival at Konserthuset Stockholm is dedicated to the Scottish composer James MacMillan. His music combines raw emotional power with spiritual focus, rooted in his Catholic faith.MacMillan often draws inspiration from traditional Scottish music and culture, and the tone poem The Death of Oscar is based on one of the legends of the Celtic poet Ossian. These ancient stories have had a significant influence on the image of Scotland, inspiring composers such as Mendelssohn-Bartholdy when he wrote... Read full text

Keywords: Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra

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Musicians

Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra
Ryan BancroftConductor
Peter MooreTrombone
Susanne RydénPresenter

Program

The Death of OscarJames MacMillan
Trombone ConcertoJames MacMillan
Les offrandes oubliées "Méditation symphonique"Olivier Messiaen
Concerto for Orchestra ”Ghosts” (The Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Joint Commission)James MacMillan
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Last update: Fri, Nov 22, 2024, 12:15

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International Composer Festival – Ghosts

Sat, Nov 16, 2024, 15:00
Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Ryan Bancroft (Conductor), Peter Moore (Trombone), Susanne Rydén (Presenter)
This year's International Composer Festival at Konserthuset Stockholm is dedicated to the Scottish composer James MacMillan. His music combines raw emotional power with spiritual focus, rooted in his Catholic faith.MacMillan often draws inspiration from traditional Scottish music and culture, and the tone poem The Death of Oscar is based on one of the legends of the Celtic poet Ossian. These ancient stories have had a significant influence on the image of Scotland, inspiring composers such as Mendelssohn-Bartholdy when he wrote The Hebrides, and Goethe in The Sorrows of Young Werther.The trombone concerto oscillates between darkness and light, with dance-like episodes and meditative calm. At times, it is incredibly beautiful and poignant. MacMillan composed it in memory of his granddaughter Sara Maria MacMillan, who died at the young age of five from an incurable brain disease.James MacMillan shares his strong Catholic faith with Olivier Messiaen (1908–92), and both composers' music contains spiritually meditative elements. Messiaen's Les offrandes oubliées – The Forgotten Offerings – was his very first published orchestral piece. It is subtitled Méditation symphonique, symphonic meditation. This is music in which Messiaen gives us his own glimpse of eternity.The Concerto for Orchestra, ”Ghosts”, is the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra's co-commissioned work for the festival. The piece was premiered a few months ago in London. The Guardian wrote about “a remarkably effective work” and noted its “energy and thrilling drama.” The title Ghosts is a reference to Beethoven's Ghost Trio, and because the music “seems to be haunted by other, earlier musical spirits and memories,” as MacMillan puts it.Read our interview with James MacMillan (in Swedish)Read more about chief conductor Ryan Bancroft
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International Composer Festival – Drama with three notes

Fri, Nov 15, 2024, 19:00
Swedish Chamber Orchestra, Brett Dean (Conductor), Ava Bahari (Violin), Susanne Rydén (Presenter)
This year's International Composer Festival at Konserthuset Stockholm is dedicated to the Scottish composer James MacMillan. His music combines raw emotional power with spiritual focus, rooted in his Catholic faith.The concert begins with an overture: Eleven. Music with a sports theme, inspired by the local football teams in East Ayrshire, Scotland, where MacMillan grew up. Eleven refers to the number of players in a team, and much of the music is built around the number eleven. The piece starts with the sound of a referee's whistle, and familiar melodies from football chants also emerge.At the heart of the expressive second violin concerto is a simple theme with just three notes played pizzicato at the beginning. As often in MacMillan's music, there are dance-like elements, but also melancholic passages that can suddenly burst open and let in light, like clearings in a dark forest. The soloist is the acclaimed Swedish violinist Ava Bahari.In the short piece One for chamber orchestra, the atmosphere is idyllic with simple folk music-inspired melodies. Tryst has strong elements of Scottish folk music, but also of other music that has been important to him. "Tryst" can refer to a secret meeting place for lovers, but farmers in Scotland often use the word to describe a place where animals gather, a "trysting place". Here, MacMillan uses Tryst to describe a meeting place for music that is dear to him.The Swedish Chamber Orchestra performs under the direction of Brett Dean, who himself was the subject of the International Composer Festival at Konserthuset in 2011, but is also internationally active as a conductor.Read our interview with James MacMillan (in Swedish)