The most important class, however, for me and for hundreds of other Hungarian musicians, was the chamber-music class. From about the age of fourteen, and until graduation from the Academy, all instrumentalists except the heavy-brass players and percussionists had to participate in this course. Presiding over it for many years was the composer Leó Weiner, who thus exercised an enormous influence on three generations of Hungarian musicians.

Sir Georg Solti
Concerto Budapest

9 May 2021, 19.00-22.00

Grand Hall

Concerto Budapest

Streamed only

Durkó: Fire Music
Péter Eötvös: Shadows (ensemble version)

intermission

Boulez: Dérive 1
Harrison Birtwistle: Secret Theatre – Hungarian premiere

Concerto Budapest
Conductor: Péter Eötvös

It is no novelty that the repertoire of the Ligeti Ensemble is compiled from the finest pieces of contemporary music, and quite frequently, some premieres are also featured on their programmes. It will also be the case this time around, as the British composer Sir Harrison Birtwistle's work Secret Theatre will be staged for the very time in Hungary. Although the programme consists entirely of instrumental pieces, there is an invisible theatre behind each one; it is clear what Zsolt Durkó’s composition (“Fire Music”) alludes to. The night’s conductor, Peter Eötvös, is fundamentally a visual type of composer, so even if his works are not based on a specific text, there is always a guiding thread along which he composes. In Shadows, we can relish resounding shadows with four instrument groups as protagonists, which play as the shadows of the flute and the clarinet. The mathematically-minded French composer, Pierre Boulez’ Dérive was “derived” from his pieces Répons and Messagesquisse. As the closure of the night comes a genuinely “Secret Theatre", Birtwistle's work, on which the composer himself commented, "What I do is something I call instrumental role-playing … I don't write an actual piece and then add a number of instruments – it is more like a play with persons that way, how they sound and what they say."

Stream free of charge at the website and Youtube channel of Concerto Budapest, at the website, Youtube and Facebook channel of the Liszt Academy, and at the Facebook channel of Papageno. Further information here.
www.concertobudapest.hu

Presented by

Concerto Budapest