| Samstag 16 Mai 2026 | 19:30 | 
| Britten Sinfonia | |
| Elizabeth Watts | Sopran | 
| Oleg Shebeta-Dragan | Klarinette | 
| Huw Watkins | Klavier | 
Fifty years after Britten’s death, Britten Sinfonia present a programme focusing on the years he spent in North America during the Second World War. Sensuous, brightly hued music written in Canada and the USA is paired with works by his ‘very dear friend’ and mentor, Aaron Copland, from the same decade.
Britten Sinfonia are joined by soprano Elizabeth Watts in Les Illuminations, and BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist Oleg Shebata-Dragan – multiple prize-winner at the prestigious Carl Nielsen Competition – in Copland’s Clarinet Concerto.
Between April 1939 and April 1942, Benjamin Britten and his partner Peter Pears enjoyed personally and professionally formative years in North America. Much of the dazzling song cycle Les Illuminations – settings of proto-surrealist poetry by Arthur Rimbaud – was composed early in their stay, and the vigorous Young Apollo for piano and strings was a commission by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, premiered in August 1939.
In the winter of 1940-41, Britten and Pears lived in an extraordinary Brooklyn houseshare with the poet W.H. Auden, the burlesque artist Gypsy Rose Lee and composer-novelist Paul Bowles. Alongside many others, including Salvador Dali, Thomas Mann and Kurt Weill, Aaron Copland was a frequent visitor. This programme also includes two of Copland’s greatest works from the 1940s – the ballet Appalachian Spring and his Clarinet Concerto, written for Benny Goodman – and piano works by his student Paul Bowles, who would later become much better known as the author of The Sheltering Sky.
This event will last approximately 100 minutes, including an interval.


