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Last event date: Tuesday, September 25 2018 7:30PM
LIGETI: Concert Românesc
BARTÓK: Piano Concerto No. 1
DOHNÁNYI: Symphony No. 2
Fülöp Ránki – piano
Hungarian National Philharmonic
Conductor: Zsolt Hamar
20th Century Hungarian Music
The world premiere of Béla Bartók's Piano Concerto No. 1 took place in Frankfurt on 1 July 1927 under the baton of Wilhelm Furtwängler and featuring the composer himself. The concerto was first performed in Budapest on 18 March 1928. Once again, Bartók performed the solo, with Ernő Dohnányi conducting the Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra. In this concerto, the orchestra and the piano operate as one: almost without pause they play in unison, sharing motifs and passing the initiative back and forth. The work can only be performed by musicians blessed with both the technical ability and wild temperament to conquer the solo, which even Bartók admitted is fiendishly difficult. Fülöp Ránki, who was born in 1995 and has been playing Bartók's Piano Concerto No.1 since he was 18, is a musician who possesses these qualities. After performing alongside Ránki, Zoltán Kocsis commented that "Fülöp plays the hardest, most challenging and technically most demanding pieces... Of all the soloists I've accompanied to date, Fülöp is probably the easiest to play with."
The guest appearance of the world-famous American maestro Lawrence Foster, who represents the senior age group of the international community of composers, promises to be among the outstanding events of the season. The musician with Romanian parents has conducted the Hungarian National Philharmonic on several occasions and each visit has attracted an enthusiastic response.
Concert-format opera performance in three acts, with one intermission, in Russian
A French evening in the spirit of refinement, colours, moods – and pathos. The Debussy work, L’Après-midi d’un Faune, heralds the birth of impressionism and the two Saint-Saëns compositions, the Cello Concerto in A minor and the hugely popular Organ Symphony, represent romanticism – the latter of which is heavily influenced by Liszt. It is not just the composers who are French: so are the conductor and the soloist.
Approx until: 9.30 pm
What could be a more beautiful sounding gift one week before Christmas than a three-part oratorio that is unknown in…
Concert-format opera performance in four acts, with one intermission, in Italian
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