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

Natacha Kudritskaya plays Golijov, Silvestrov, Couperin & Beethoven

Date & Time
Mon, Feb 24, 2025, 20:15

Keywords: Chamber Music

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Natacha KudritskayaPiano

Program

ZZ's DreamGolijov
BagatellenSilvestrov
Delen uit Pièces de clavecin, 5e en 13e ordreFrançois Couperin
Sonate nr. 14 in C-sharp minor, op. 27, no. 2 'Mondschein'Ludwig van Beethoven
Delen uit Pièces de clavecin, 5e en 13e ordreFrançois Couperin
BagatellenSilvestrov
LevanteGolijov
Give feedback
Last update: Fri, Nov 22, 2024, 12:40

Similar events

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

Artistic depiction of the event

Marmen Quartet plays Beethoven and Ravel

Thu, Aug 29, 2024, 20:00
Marmen Quartet
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
Artistic depiction of the event

Tetzlaff Quartett plays Beethoven, Widmann and Brahms

Tue, Mar 11, 2025, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Chamber Music Hall (Berlin)
Tetzlaff Quartett (String Quartet), Christian Tetzlaff (Violin), Elisabeth Kufferath (Violin), Hanna Weinmeister (Viola), Tanja Tetzlaff (Cello)
In addition to his career as a celebrated soloist, violinist Christian Tetzlaff performs all over the world with his own string quartet. This guest performance in the Chamber Music Hall opens with Beethoven's late, expressive String Quartet op. 131, the beginning of which Richard Wagner called “probably the most melancholy thing that has ever been expressed in sound”. In his “Choral Quartet”, Jörg Widmann expresses “sounds and phases of futility that come from nowhere and lead nowhere,” he says. The programme concludes with Johannes Brahms' Second Quartet, which steers a lush course between melancholy and joie de vivre.
Artistic depiction of the event

Schumann Quartet plays Mozart, Beethoven and Prokofiev

Fri, Apr 26, 2024, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Chamber Music Hall (Berlin)
Schumann Quartett (String Quartet), Erik Schumann (Violin), Ken Schumann (Violin), Veit Hertenstein (Viola), Mark Schumann (Cello), Susanne Stähr (Referentin)
From a young age, the brothers Erik, Ken and Mark Schumann were deeply absorbed by the subtleties of chamber music. Then, when they were joined by violist Veit Hertenstein, the Schumann Quartet launched an international career, garnering the highest praise for their “dazzling virtuosity” (Süddeutsche Zeitung). For their debut in our series, the quartet has chosen Mozart’s galant A major Quartet and the dark First Quartet by Prokofiev, influenced by Beethoven’s quartets. These will also be represented by the Op. 127 quartet, from Beethoven’s audacious late period.
Artistic depiction of the event

Concertgebouw Orchestra plays Beethoven

Thu, Jun 19, 2025, 20:15
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Han-Na Chang (Conductor), Santa Vižine (Viola), Tatjana Vassiljeva (Cello)
In her first performance with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, Han-Na Chang champions Beethoven’s lyrical Fourth Symphony. Bernd Richard Deutsch’s Phantasma was inspired by Beethoven and Gustav Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze on display in Vienna’s Secession Building. Phantasma made a big impression on audiences at its world premiere, performed by the Concertgebouw Orchestra in October 2022. Klimt’s idealised vision of the world, brilliant explosions of colour, symbols and even gold – Deutsch brings them all to life in the music.Richard Strauss was unrivalled in his ability to make the most fantastic scenes come to life in music. Cervantes’s novel Don Quixote served as Strauss’s inspiration for his Fantastic Variations on a Theme of Knightly Character. The adventures of the knight-errant and his faithful squire, as heroic as they are hilarious, come to life as the orchestra’s principal cellist Tatiana Vassiljeva and principal violist Santa Vižine, with support from the tenor tuba and bass clarinet, join their orchestra in battle. But who are they fighting? Windmills, sheep and, of course, the knight of the bright moon. Han-Na Chang now makes her first appearance with the Concertgebouw Orchestra five years after it was originally scheduled owing to the coronavirus pandemic.
Artistic depiction of the event

Jan Lisiecki plays Beethoven

Sat, Apr 12, 2025, 19:30
Tarmo Peltokoski (Conductor), Jan Lisiecki (Piano)
There are few experiences in classical music more invigorating, or more stirring than Sibelius’s Second Symphony. Imagine a swelling river of sound; a musical voyage that begins amid the tranquillity of nature and ends in a surge of triumph. That’s Sibelius’s Second Symphony, and there are few experiences in classical music more invigorating, or more stirring. For the young Finnish conductor Tarmo Peltokoski, Sibelius is a national hero. There’s another tale about memory to be told here, as Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki takes centre stage to showcase the grandeur and glory of Beethoven’s mighty ‘Emperor’ Concerto – a work dedicated to the composer’s patron and friend, Archduke Rudolf. *Please note a change of programme from originally advertised
Artistic depiction of the event

Jan Lisiecki plays Beethoven

Sun, Apr 13, 2025, 15:00
Tarmo Peltokoski (Conductor), Jan Lisiecki (Piano)
Imagine a swelling river of sound; a musical voyage that begins amid the tranquillity of nature and ends in a surge of triumph.That’s Sibelius’s Second Symphony, and there are few experiences in classical music more invigorating, or more stirring. For the young Finnish conductor Tarmo Peltokoski, Sibelius is a national hero, and Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki takes centre stage to showcase the grandeur and glory of Beethoven’s mighty ‘Emperor’ Concerto – a work dedicated to the composer’s patron and friend, Archduke Rudolf.
Artistic depiction of the event

The Leonkoro Quartet plays Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Rihm

Fri, Oct 11, 2024, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Chamber Music Hall (Berlin)
Leonkoro Quartet (String Quartet), Jonathan Schwarz (Violin), Amelie Wallner (Violin), Mayu Konoe (Viola), Lukas Schwarz (Cello)
The Leonkoro Quartet has enjoyed a meteoric rise to success. Founded in 2019, the ensemble is already at home on international concert stages, making its celebrated Philharmonie debut in February 2024. “The Leonkoro Quartet’s risk-conscious power of intensity is legendary. Its virtuosity is unbelievably natural,” wrote the Tagesspiegel afterwards. The young musicians return this season – with an energetic string quartet by our composer in residence Wolfgang Rihm, who died in July of this year, a wonderfully melodic opus by Felix Mendelssohn, and a key work from Beethoven’ s late oeuvre.
Artistic depiction of the event

The Hagen Quartet plays Haydn, Beethoven and Ravel

Wed, May 29, 2024, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Chamber Music Hall (Berlin)
Hagen Quartet (String Quartet), Lukas Hagen (Violin), Rainer Schmidt (Violin), Veronika Hagen (Viola), Clemens Hagen (Cello)
They have been making music together for over 40 years: as the Hagen Quartet, the three siblings Lukas, Veronika and Clemens Hagen with violinist Rainer Schmidt have reached the top of their field with their unerring sense of style, beauty of tone and potent expressiveness. Viennese Classicism has always been a major focus of the Salzburg-based ensemble. In this concert, we will hear two late quartets by Haydn and Beethoven which bear witness to both composers’ inexhaustible invention and innovative boldness. Maurice Ravel’s elegant, poignant quartet shows the genre from a French perspective.
Artistic depiction of the event

Pianist Misha Fomin plays Beethoven, Bach-Brahms and Chopin

Sun, Nov 17, 2024, 14:15
Misha Fomin (Piano)
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!
Artistic depiction of the event

Schumann Quartett plays Schuberts Rosamunde

Thu, Nov 14, 2024, 20:15
Schumann Quartett
For lovers of chamber music the Recital Hall is the venue of choice. You can hear the musicians breathe and you can practically touch them. This hall is also cherished by musicians for its beautiful acoustics and direct contact with the audience. In the Recital Hall you can hear the best musicians of our time. Buy your tickets now and experience the magic of the Recital Hall for yourself!