
GLAGOLOTIC MASS Pászti season ticket 1
This concert features two Czech rarities bookending a large-scale Austrian work that is itself likewise an infrequent guest at concert halls.
This concert features two Czech rarities bookending a large-scale Austrian work that is itself likewise an infrequent guest at concert halls.
Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!
Last event date: Tuesday, October 18 2022 7:30PM
GLAGOLOTIC MASS Pászti season ticket 1
Dvořák, Bruckner, Janáček – creative artists from the turn of the 20th century. One symphonic piece permeated with love of homeland and two works of church music. Thix concert provides an opportunity for the Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra to take the stage alongside the Hungarian National Choir, and conductor János Kovács is not only at home in any genre, but is a particularly skilled interpreter of vocal music thanks to his vast operatic experience.
The subject of František Ferdinand’s play Šamberk is the Czech dramatist Josef Kajetán Tyl, who penned the words to the country’s national anthem. Dvořák wrote the incidental music for it in 1881/82 – of which the My Homeland overture comprises a part. Although Wagner’s disciple Anton Bruckner was a composer of symphonies, he also composed liturgical works, the most successful of which was his Te Deum (from 1885). With its unique sound and harmonic world, Janáček’s Glagolitic (Old Slavic) Mass from 1926 is considered an apotheosis of the idea of Pan-Slavism.
Polina Pasztircsák, Atala Schöck, Attila Fekete and István Kovács are top singers who are highly acclaimed both in Hungary and abroad, and who often perform on the concert stage in addition to their operatic triumphs. Born in 1951, János Kovács is one of the most frequently engaged conductors in Hungary. He studied at Budapest’s Liszt Academy under András Kórodi. He has long been connected to both the Hungarian State Opera and the Hungarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in many ways. His collaboration with the Hungarian National Philharmonic has also been a fruitful one for many decades.
Program:
Antonín Dvořák: My Homeland overture, op. 62
Anton Bruckner: Te Deum
***
Leoš Janáček: Glagolitic Mass
Featuring:
Polina Pasztircsák soprano
Atala Schöck alto
Attila Fekete tenor
Volodymyr Tyshkov bass
Hungarian National Choir (choirmaster: Csaba Somos)
Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra
Conductor: János Kovács
The idea for The Nutcracker ballet came from theone-time director of the Tsarist theatre who, based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s fairy tale entitled the Nutcracker and the Mouse King, wanted to stage a fairy tale ballet that would surpass all that had gone before, both in sound and in spectacle. Tchaikovsky was asked to compose the music and after Swan Lake and Sleeping Beauty his third and final ballet was also a great success. It was the six-movement suite of the music of The Nutcracker that was first performed in March 1892, and in December of the same year the spectacularly presented theatrical work was also performed. The Nutcracker has become the most frequently played ballet piece of all time.
Egy amerikai kisvárosban élő egyetemista társaság minden hétvégén vacsorát ad, ahol egy-egy meghívott vendéggel vitaestet tartanak a világ megjavításának lehetőségeiről.…
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Janza Kata, Mészáros Árpád Zsolt és Szomor György ünnepi gálakoncertje
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