This month
Classical concerts featuringMarin Alsop
Overview
Quick overview of musician Marin Alsop by associated keywords
ProgramFrequently performs
Works by
Grażyna Bacewicz
5
Works by
Karol Szymanowski
4Works by
Aaron Copland
3Works by
Brett Dean
3Works by
Heitor Villa-Lobos
3Works by
Outi Tarkiainen
3Works by
Sofia Gubaidulina
3Works by
Krzysztof Penderecki
2
Works by
Ludwig van Beethoven
2
Works by
Béla Bartók
1MusiciansFrequently collaborate with
Musician
NOSPR
7orchestra
Berliner Philharmoniker
3Musician
Gijs Leenaars
3choir
Rundfunkchor Berlin
3Musician
Ben McAteer
2Upcoming Concerts
Concerts featuring Marin Alsop in season 2024/25 or later
This month
In Katowice
In Katowice
NOSPR / Alsop / Requiem as a tribute
Narodowej Orkiestry Symfonicznej Polskiego Radia, Concert Hall (Katowice)
“It is with greatest ease and willingness that I am working on this Concerto and, nota bene, I feel that this is going to be a first-class trick” – these words from a letter by Karol Szymanowski are proof of how important the Symphony No. 4 was for the composer. It was his unfulfilled dream of a “true” piano concerto. One of a pianistic tour de force, the first sketches of which he dropped to focus on the Stabat Mater he was working on back then. The moving „Peasant Requiem” (such was the title Szymanowski had originally intended for the work), born out of the pain he experienced after his niece’s death, it brings together religious ecstasy and a note of the Polish folklore to be heard in a recollection of the popular Bitter Lamentations resonating in the composer’s memory.How different was that world from the instrumental Chaconne by Krzysztof Penderecki! The latter is an expressive musical tribute to the memory of the late Polish Pope. It was this piece that provided a symbolic closure for the Polish Requiem, which Penderecki had been working on for a quarter of a century – a monumental chronicle of Poland’s modern history, the melancholic finale of which contains both a nostalgia for the baroque tradition and emotions of a surprisingly romantic nature.Róża ŚwiatczyńskaConcert duration (intermission included): approximately 90 minutes
This season
In Katowice
In Katowice
NOSPR / Katowice Culture Nature Festival
Narodowej Orkiestry Symfonicznej Polskiego Radia, Concert Hall (Katowice)
Details about the performers, repertoire, and ticket sales will be published along with the announcement of the entire festival program.
This season
In Katowice
In Katowice
NOSPR / Alsop / Season finale. A Titan
Narodowej Orkiestry Symfonicznej Polskiego Radia, Concert Hall (Katowice)
It is rare for “first” symphonies to be created in a spontaneous rapture of inspiration. The creative process may last more than a dozen years. Sometimes it is only the “second” that becomes the “first”, and at other times it only takes its final shape after emerging from a formal ambiguity. The one to blame for all this is the author of the “Eroica”, who set the bar so high that it is difficult for his successors to get rid of the Beethovenian complex.Grażyna Bacewicz had already composed her “first” Symphony No. 1 before the war. Nonetheless, dissatisfied with the result, she “renounced” that child of hers and did not enter it into the official catalogue of works. She returned to the symphonic form in 1945, creating a four-movement neoclassical work marked by the wartime trauma. It was this symphony that she eventually gave the official number one. In spite of the fact that the work was performed by a Cracow symphony, however, she decided against publishing it.Mahler was twenty-eight years old when he finished the Symphony No. 1 and titled it Titan, thus referencing a novel by Jean Paul, a prophet of Romantic literature. Seeking a form capable of accommodating all the compositional ideas which crowded his mind, he must have experienced much more quandaries than the Polish composer did. He spent a long time adjusting the form and defining the genre for his Symphony No. 1. He hesitated between various shades and incarnations of the wide-spanning form of tone poem, alternately adding and removing the literary programme.The piece, which Mahler presented for the first time in Budapest on 20th November 1889, was introduced as A tone poem in two parts, the first part encompassing three movements of the cycle, and the second one encompassing two of them. Mahler lent them a full spectrum of emotional shades – from subjective and philosophical ones, to grotesque folklore. He initially gave each movement a programme title, only to remove those later. Thus, as a symphonist, he took the side of absolute music. After reducing the cycle to four movements, he defined his piece as Titan, a tone poem in symphonic form, in order to eventually announce, to himself and to the world, what a symphony is, and to redefine the term.Andrzej SułekConcert duration (intermission included): approximately 100 minutes