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Orchestral concert: Schumann, Bruckner

Vinnitskaya, Fischer

2021
March19, 7:45 P.M.
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Cancelled

Program

Robert Schumannbio:

Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54

INTERVAL

Anton Brucknerbio:

Symphony No. 9 in D minor

Featuring

Conductor

Soloist

Other information

Season tickets

  • DORÁTI A
  • DORÁTI B

The event is about 2.5 hours long.

About the event

Our orchestral concert planned for March 18, 19 and 20 will be held without live audience on March 18 at 7:45 p.m. and livestreamed on the ESzínház streaming platform. The program of the concert will be Bruckner's Symphony No. 9 in D minor. Stream tickets are available here.

Ticket and season pass holders will receive free access to the online concert stream through a link that will be sent to them by email before the concert.

There are compositions with biographical relevance, marking events of outstanding importance in the composer’s life. Robert Schumann’s only finished piano concerto represents a milestone not only in the life of the composer, who had been training to become a pianist until an injury put an end to his dreams, but also in the history of Romantic piano concertos. The performance of the piece requires a musician like Anna Vinnitskaya, who was described by the Washington Post as “a true lioness at the keyboard, devouring the most difficult pages of music with adamantine force” and a virtuosity that is never self-serving. In addition to the number 9, which has gained mystical significance thanks to Beethoven, Bruckner’s last symphony stands out from the composer’s oeuvre because it remained incomplete. Though the composer prayed for strength daily, in the end God only let him complete three movements of the work, which is how it will be performed at the concert.

In 1841, Schumann composed a lyrical fantasy for piano and orchestra, which he described as a work that “lies somewhere between a symphony, a concerto and a large sonata.” No publisher showed an interest in this piece, so four years later, urged by his wife, the world-famous pianist Clara Schumann, he added two more movements and completed his Piano Concerto in A minor, which was a huge success already at the premiere. Breaking with tradition, Schumann turned the piano into an organic part of the orchestra instead of showing it off, incurring Liszt’s criticism who once referred to this work as a “concerto without piano”. Schumann has been vindicated though: the brilliant musical dialogues of the opening movement, the emotional extremes of the Intermezzo and the explosive virtuosity of the finale ensured the work a place among the most popular concertos.

In Bruckner’s case, it is no exaggeration to call his Symphony No. 9 a farewell to life. The composer was fully aware that the composition he had been working on for years would likely remain unfinished. Even though a myriad of notes suggest that he was intending to crown the symphony with a bombastic concluding movement―as a matter of fact, he proposed his own Te Deum as finale―the work ends with a hard-rending but uplifting, achingly beautiful Adagio. The movement exhibits motifs from Bruckner’s previous symphonies, and ends on gentle but firm note, rounding off the composer’s oeuvre which came to an end with his death in 1896. The piece represents one of the most important links between the 19th and 20th centuries. The bold harmonic shifts in the rumbling introduction of the first movement and the tonally indeterminate, dissonant sections, large intervals and prominent rhythms of the demonic scherzo go beyond Wagner and anticipate Stravinsky, Bartók and the Second Viennese School.

Did you know? Schumann’s piano concerto premiered in Dresden on December 4, 1845 (soloist: Clara Schumann, conductor: Ferdinand Hiller), Bruckner’s symphony was first performed in Vienna on February 11, 1903 (conductor: Ferdinand Löwe); the Festival Orchestra last played the piano concerto in Budapest on November 26, 2012 (soloist: Richard Goode, conductor: Iván Fischer) and the symphony in Taipei on March 15, 2014 (conductor: Iván Fischer).

Contemporary events on January 29, 1845, the New York Evening Mirror newspaper published The Raven, a poem by American poet Edgar Allan Poe / French artist Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres painted the portrait of Princesse de Broglie, Comtesse d’Haussonville in 1845 / Tannhäuser, the opera of German composer Richard Wagner was first staged in Dresden’s Hoftheater on October 19, 1845 / the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), and organization fighting for women’s voting rights, was founded in Manchester on October 10, 1903 / Helios Overture by Danish composer Carl Nielsen premiered in Copenhagen on October 8, 1903 / The Call of the Wild, a novel by American writer Jack London, was published in 1903

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