Ravel, Maurice (1875-1937) | Le Tombeau de Couperin | |
Du Yun (n. 1977) | Ears of the Book, Concerto for Pipa and Orchestra (World premiere) | |
Weill, Kurt (1900-1950) | Symphony no. 1 | |
Dylan, Bob (n. 1941) | When the Ship Comes In (arr. Christina Courtin) | |
Weill, Kurt (1900-1950) | The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny: Alabama Song / Whiskey Bar (arr. Christina Courtin) | |
Buarque de Hollanda, Francisco "Chico" (n. 1944) | Geni e o Zepelim (arr. Colin Jacobsen) |
Wu Man | Pipa |
Magos Herrera | Voix |
Christina Courtin | Violon |
The Knights | |
Eric Jacobsen | Direction |
The Knights are a musically omnivorous chamber ensemble, a self-described “fellowship of adventurous musicians dedicated to transforming the orchestral experience.” In this program of Ravel, Weill and Brecht, Bob Dylan, Chico Buarque, and Du Yun, the orchestra—conducted by Eric Jacobsen—welcomes pipa virtuoso Wu Man, “one of the rare musicians who has changed the history of the instrument she plays” (The Boston Globe); and The Knights’ own multifaceted violinist and singer-songwriter Christina Courtin. To close the evening, special guest Magos Herrera—a versatile interpreter of jazz and Latin American music—joins the group for a new arrangement of Buarque’s powerful, Weill/Brecht–inspired “Geni e o Zepelim.” As part of Carnegie Hall’s Fall of the Weimar Republic festival, this program looks to the past and present through multiple layers of history and culture, in true “Knightsian” style.