Southbank Centre: Royal Festival HallBelvedere Road, Londres, Greater London, SE1 8XX, Reino Unido
2012-Oct-17, Royal Festival Hall: London Philharmonic Orchestra: Shostakovich Symphony No.10https://bachtrack.com/es_ES/concert-event/london-philharmonic-orchestra-shostakovich-symphony-no10-london-philharmonic-orchestra-southbank-centre-royal-festival-hall-17-october-2012/1253612012-10-172012-10-17https://schema.org/OfflineEventAttendanceModehttps://schema.org/EventScheduledFechas/horas en zona horaria de London
Programa
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827) | Obertura Leonora, núm. 3, Op.72b | |
Vine, Carl (n. 1954) | Piano Concerto no. 2 (UK Première) | |
Shostakovich, Dmitri (1906-1975) | Sinfonía núm. 10 en mi menor, Op.93 |
Intérpretes
London Philharmonic Orchestra | |
Vassily Sinaisky | Director |
Piers Lane | Piano |
Vassily Sinaisky conducts Shostakovich's most powerful symphony - the mighty, uncompromising Tenth.
In July 1953, shortly after the death of Joseph Stalin, Shostakovich started composing his Tenth Symphony. Years of psychological torture at Stalin's hand found their way into the symphony's compelling obsession and relentless drive.
Gone, Shostakovich believed for a moment, was the censorship that had curtailed him for decades. In the most powerful symphony he wrote, we glimpse a liberated composer unleashing his all.
With Beethoven's own manifesto for musical freedom and the first UK performance of Australian composer Carl Vine's Second Piano Concerto, here's a concert that promises to seize a fulsome hold on the emotions.
Carl Vine's Second Piano Concerto was commissioned by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and London Philharmonic Orchestra.
In July 1953, shortly after the death of Joseph Stalin, Shostakovich started composing his Tenth Symphony. Years of psychological torture at Stalin's hand found their way into the symphony's compelling obsession and relentless drive.
Gone, Shostakovich believed for a moment, was the censorship that had curtailed him for decades. In the most powerful symphony he wrote, we glimpse a liberated composer unleashing his all.
With Beethoven's own manifesto for musical freedom and the first UK performance of Australian composer Carl Vine's Second Piano Concerto, here's a concert that promises to seize a fulsome hold on the emotions.
Carl Vine's Second Piano Concerto was commissioned by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and London Philharmonic Orchestra.