
- 6 December 2018 - 6 December 2018
- Etichete Razvan Popovici Rhapsodie Roumanie Ensemble Raro Storioni Trio Concertgebouw Amsterdam
It is our pleasure to invite you to the concert RHAPSODIE ROUMAINE
which will take place at Concertgebouw Amsterdam,
Kleine Zaal, 6 December 2018, at 20.15
Rhapsodie
Roumanie is a musical canvas for the imagination. Alongside Gabriel
Fauré's passionate Piano
Quartet in C minor we present two emblematic works by the Romanian
Grandmaster George Enescu, who was a prodigious student of Fauré at the
Paris Conservatoire. Romanian Rhapsody No.1, Enescu's most
famous composition, is reinvented in a new arrangement by Thomas Wally
for piano quartet. The second work is Enescu's recently rediscovered Nocturne Ville d'Avraye
for Piano Quartet, a souvenir of the composer's lifelong friendship
with his student, the great Yehudy Menuhin. Another little gem of the
evening is a selection of Béla Bartók's Violin Duos, which capture the
unique and compelling spirit of the Romanian traditional folk music. The
programme is completed by the splendid Piano Trio No.2 in C major by
Johannes Brahms.
The Ensemble
Raro and the Storioni Trio will transport the listener to the
multi-layered world of the Romanian musical landscape, where joy and
melancholy are inseparable and heaven is to be found both under the feet
and over the head.
This evening
concludes a concert tour which included performances in Vienna, Munich,
Antwerpen, Bucharest, Tokyo and Kobe and is part of the Romanian
centenary celebrations.
Tickets: Ticket Office Concertgebouw or https://www.concertgebouw.nl/en/concerts-tickets
Programme
Fauré - Piano
Quartet No. 1 in C minor, op. 15
Enescu -
Nocturne 'Ville d'Avrayen'
Brahms - Piano
Trio No. 2 in C major, op. 87
Bartók - delen
uit '44 Duo's', Sz. 98
Enescu - Rhapsodie Roumaine No. 1 in A major, op. 11, nr. 1
This concert has an intermission
Musicians
Storioni Trio - Wauter Vossenviolin - Marc Vossenvioloncello - Bart van der Roer piano
Ensemble Raro – Erik Schumann violin – Razvan Popovici viola – Jan-Erik Gustaffson violoncello – Diana Ketler piano