Savaria Symphony Orchestra / Discoveries
On this night, the Müpa Budapest audience will get to hear some poetic English music - written by a composer who died more than a century ago, but whose works have never been played in Hungary.
On this night, the Müpa Budapest audience will get to hear some poetic English music - written by a composer who died more than a century ago, but whose works have never been played in Hungary.
Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!
Last event date: Sunday, February 23 2020 7:30PM
23 February 2020, Sunday
7:30 pm — 10 pm
Dohnányi: Ruralia Hungarica, op. 32
Bartók: Rhapsody No. 1, Sz. 86, BB 94a
Bartók: Rhapsody No. 2, Sz. 89, BB 96a
Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad
Elgar: Cello Concerto
How many attention-worthy composers, past and present, whom we have never heard of could there be in the world? How many valuable works have been lurking around for years, undiscovered by music listeners? On this night, the Müpa Budapest audience will get to hear some poetic English music - written by a composer who died more than a century ago, but whose works have never been played in Hungary.
The Savaria Symphony Orchestra and its young conductor, Gergely Madaras, however, require no discovering. Ever since its establishment in 1974, the orchestra has been an important player on the Hungarian music scene. The Junior Prima Award-winning Madaras, for his part, though only born in 1984, has already enjoyed many successes both in Hungary and abroad, and is also active as the music director of the Orchestre Dijon Bourgogne. The performer of Elgar's popular Cello Concerto, the French/Belgian Camille Thomas studied in Paris, Weimar and Berlin. She has signed an exclusive contract with Deutsche Grammphon, and Fazil Say composed his cello concerto Never Give Up specifically for her. Bálint Kruppa, who will play Bartók's Rhapsodies at the concert, studied at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music under Eszter Perényi. The founder of the Kruppa String Quartet has already been distinguished with the Junior Prima Award in recognition of his work thus far.
George Butterworth, the English composer behind the piece that will close the programme, was born in 1885 and lived only to the age of 31, dying in 1916 in World War One, during the Battle of the Somme on the Western Front. His orchestral rhapsody A Shropshire Lad is a late Romantic work that is soft in tone and rich in colour, the 'echo' of the composer's song cycle of the same title.
Conductor: Gergely Madaras
Featuring:
cello Camille Thomas
violin Bálint Kruppa
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