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Chamber concert: Dialogue of religions

Date & Time
Thu, Jan 30, 2025, 19:30

Keywords: Chamber Music, Special Concert

Artistic depiction of the event

Musicians

Symphonikerblås
Andreas GruberTrumpet
Christian LöwTrumpet
Heinrich BrucknerTrumpet
Reinhard HofbauerTrombone
Wolfgang PfistermüllerTrombone
Franz WinklerTuba
Thomas SchindlPercussion

Program

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Last update: Fri, Nov 22, 2024, 12:35

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On this afternoon, when the new scholarship holders of our Joseph Keilberth Orchestra Academy perform chamber music together with musicians from our orchestra, it shows best how we make the young orchestral talents of tomorrow fit for the job: Listening to one another in a small ensemble is essential for the large community of the symphony orchestra. And what better way to learn than in concert? We can look forward to a colourful programme with masterpieces of chamber music literature. A surprise concert, as it were, because many scholarship holders have just been called into our orchestra, so that an exact programme can only be announced a few weeks before the concert. Looking forward to a »carte blanche« that will certainly not disappoint.
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Chamber Concert

Sat, Jan 29, 2022, 20:00
Christopher Patrick Corbett (Clarinet), Tobias Steymans (Violin), Giovanni Menna (Viola), Giorgi Kharadze (Cello), Victoria Schwartzman (Piano)
Composed in 1785, Mozart’s K 478 was his first contribution to the piano quartet genre. The emotionality of the opening movement’s minore key and the subtly wrought dialogue between strings and piano proclaim its high artistic standards. No less brilliant is the Piano Quartet composed 100 years later by the young Richard Strauss. In his youthful élan he vacillates between engagement with romantic models (especially Brahms) and harbingers of his own style. The ennoblement of the clarinet as a chamber music instrument takes us back to Mozart. To the present day, many works owe their existence to the challenge of blending its timbre with the strings. The same is true of Veress’s Trio of 1972 and Penderecki’s Quartet of 1993, whose elegiac finale also pays tribute to Schubert’s C major Quintet.
Artistic depiction of the event

Chamber Concert

Sun, Jan 30, 2022, 18:00
Christopher Patrick Corbett (Clarinet), Tobias Steymans (Violin), Giovanni Menna (Viola), Giorgi Kharadze (Cello), Victoria Schwartzman (Piano)
Composed in 1785, Mozart’s K 478 was his first contribution to the piano quartet genre. The emotionality of the opening movement’s minore key and the subtly wrought dialogue between strings and piano proclaim its high artistic standards. No less brilliant is the Piano Quartet composed 100 years later by the young Richard Strauss. In his youthful élan he vacillates between engagement with romantic models (especially Brahms) and harbingers of his own style. The ennoblement of the clarinet as a chamber music instrument takes us back to Mozart. To the present day, many works owe their existence to the challenge of blending its timbre with the strings. The same is true of Veress’s Trio of 1972 and Penderecki’s Quartet of 1993, whose elegiac finale also pays tribute to Schubert’s C major Quintet.
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Chamber Concert

Sat, Mar 5, 2022, 20:00
Werner Mittelbach (Clarinet), Susanne Sonntag (Bassoon), Ursula Kepser (Horn), Anne Schoenholtz (Violin), Andrea Eun-Jeong Kim (Violin), Tobias Reifland (Viola), Jaka Stadler (Cello), Teja Andresen (Double bass)
This evening of Nordic chamber music covers a wide range of styles by composers from four Scandinavian countries. The historical starting point is the Septet for Winds and Strings, written in 1817 by the Swedish romantic composer Franz Berwald. It is unmistakably modelled on Beethoven’s masterpiece for the same combination of instruments. Grieg’s unfinished F major String Quartet of 1891 exudes a lilting charm and a Norwegian hue, while the E flat major Quartet by his Danish colleague Carl Nielsen (1898) strikes out on noticeably more modern paths. Rounding off the programme are two pièces de occasion: an enchanting Serenade with a touch of Vienna, composed by Sibelius during a holiday on Finland’s Archipelago Sea, and a humorous “unrequited” nocturnal serenade by Carl Nielsen, written during a concert tour in 1914.