Emirates Metro Series

It’s been a long week, so it’s time to revive and recharge for the weekend. Head down to Bennelong Point for the Emirates Metro Series and catch the Sydney Symphony in concert with great conductors and exciting guest artists.

The fabulous music on offer in 2010 embraces exotic colour, luxurious romanticism and classical poise. Two concerts from Ashkenazy’s Mahler Odyssey and an exclusive concert by violinist Midori complete the mix for eight transforming Friday evenings.

FIVE OR EIGHT CONCERTS IN THE SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE CONCERT HALL FRIDAY | 8PM 
 

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Mahler 3

We’re ushering in the Sydney summer with Mahler’s sunniest and most irresistible symphony.

We’re ushering in the Sydney summer with Mahler’s Third Symphony – his sunniest symphony of all. “The finale is just unbelievably uplifting,” says Ashkenazy, “and no one, not even the most pessimistic person, will be able to resist it.” But before the music arrives at that glorious conclusion, radiant in its affirmation of love, it traces a musical journey inspired by nature and the dream of a summer morning.

It’s an expansive, all-embracing symphony that finds as much meaning in a dainty meadow flower as in the voices of angels. This, said Mahler, is a symphony that wakes from unfathomable silence and sings and rings!

Vladimir Ashkenazy conductor
Lilli Paasikivi mezzo-soprano
Ladies of the Sydney Philharmonia Choirs
Sydney Children’s Choir

Pre-concert talk by David Garrett in the Northern Foyer, 45 minutes before each performance.

** Customer Service Notice : Mahler 3 with the SSO **
Please note there will be NO interval at the Sydney Symphony’s performances of Mahler’s Third Symphony on 2, 3 and 4 December. The concert will last approximately 1 hr 45 mins. Latecomers will be admitted only after Part I, approximately 35 mins after the start of the concert.
We encourage you to arrive in good time to avoid missing the first part of the concert.

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Arabian Nights

The French and the Russians have always had a soft spot for each other – in music at least!

Rimsky-Korsakov, Saint-Saëns, Khachaturian – these are the composers who give us orchestral colour, sweeping melodies and vibrant exoticism, the composers who temper Germanic convention with brilliance and fantasy. Which all makes for a perfect match when we bring a Russian conductor and a French soloist together to perform vividly imagined music with an Oriental cast.

Let your imagination loose on the tender Adagio and thrilling dances that accompany Spartacus’s uprising. Surrender to the spinning violin solos and rich orchestral palette of Scheherazade’s nightly tales – a spirited heroine in an exotic world. And discover the charming panoramas of Saint-Saëns’ most evocative piano concerto, with its thudding steamship propellers and croaking frogs on the Nile.

KHACHATURIAN Spartacus: Suite
SAINT-SAËNS Piano Concerto No.5 (Egyptian)
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Scheherazade

Alexander Lazarev conductor
Jean-Yves Thibaudet piano

Pre-concert talk by Yvonne Frindle in the Northern Foyer, 45 minutes before each performance.

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Viva Espana

Spanish flair, Spanish rhythm and the elegant passion of Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez.

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Dance the farruca, malambo, fandango! Hear all the colours of Spain when Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Peruvian-born conductor, returns to Sydney with this exhilarating program.

Joaquín Turina leads the dancing with music that rises “like incense” and seizes the listener with its elegant fervour. From Argentina, young composer Esteban Benzecry reveals the colours of the Southern Cross in a five-movement suite ending in a red-blooded malambo. Manuel de Falla brings the music that made him world-famous: The Three-Cornered Hat – a high-spirited ballet that radiates sensuousness and virility.

Rodrigo doesn’t dance. But his much-loved guitar concerto blends the ardent flamenco soul with a rococo elegance inspired by the palace of Aranjuez. This is the music that sealed Rodrigo’s fate as the composer of “that concerto”, and Slava Grigoryan makes his Sydney Symphony concert hall debut as its soloist.

TURINA Danzas fantásticas
RODRIGO Concierto de Aranjuez
BENZECRY Colours of the Southern Cross
FALLA The Three-Cornered Hat: Suites

Miguel Harth-Bedoya conductor
Slava Grigoryan guitar

Pre-concert talk by Natalie Shea in the Northern Foyer, 45 minutes before each performance.


AUDIO PLAYER LISTING

Track 1 – TURINA Danzas fantásticas: Orgia
West Australian Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jorge Mester
ABC 438 198-2
Track 2 – RODRIGO Concierto de Aranjuez: 2nd movement (Adagio)
Slava Grigoryan, guitar, with the Queensland Orchestra conducted by Brett Kelly
ABC 476 8072
Track 3 – FALLA The Three-Cornered Hat: The Miller’s Dance
Track 4 – FALLA The Three-Cornered Hat: Final Dance (Jota)
West Australian Symphony Orchestra conducted by Jorge Mester
ABC 438 198-2

Audio kindly supplied by Universal Music

Currently available from iTunes: Rodrigo

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Beethoven and Bruch

The greatest composers are always on the brink of something new. Join us for Haydn, Schoenberg, Beethoven and Max Bruch’s enchanting first violin concerto.

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Here’s what you need to know…

Haydn: a witty composer with a deft touch for workplace politics; his Farewell Symphony cleverly ends up with just two musicians on the stage and won his orchestra the change of scene they were hankering after.

Bruch: a dreamer who heard the soul of music in melody; from its opening flourishes to its bravura gypsy finale, his much-loved First Violin Concerto sums up everything that is rich and enchanting about the Romantic style.

Schoenberg: rewrote the rulebook but believed only in inspiration; his symphony is “little but vast”, concentrated, forward-looking and daring.

Beethoven: ditto.

The greatest composers are always on the brink of something new and fresh. Hear it for yourself in a boldly imagined program that doesn’t stand still.

You can find out more about our guest violinist Daniel Hope via his website at www.danielhope.com.

MUSIC ON THE BRINK
HAYDN
Symphony No.45 (Farewell)
BRUCH Violin Concerto No.1
SCHOENBERG Chamber Symphony No.1
BEETHOVEN Symphony No.8

Oleg Caetani
conductor
Daniel Hope violin

 

PRE-CONCERT TALKS

Free pre-concert talk by Tony Cane in the Northern Foyer, 45 minutes before each concert.

AUDIO PLAYER LISTING

Track 1 – BRUCH Violin Concerto No.1: 1st movement (Introduction)
Arthur Grumiaux, violin, and the New Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Heinz Wallberg
PHILIPS 476 8485
Track 2 – SCHOENBERG Chamber Symphony No.1, Op.9: excerpt
Members of the Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly
DECCA 473 728-2
Track 3 – BEETHOVEN Symphony No.8: 1st movement (Allegro vivace e con brio)
Track 4 – BEETHOVEN Symphony No.8: 4th movement (Allegro vivace)
Berlin Philharmonic conducted by Herbert von Karajan
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 429 0402

Visit again in 2010 for more highlights from this concert.

Audio kindly supplied by Universal Music.

Currently available from iTunes:
Bruch
Schoenberg
Beethoven

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Midori Plays Mozart

Midori returns to Sydney for a celebration of the violin.

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Midori found fame as a prodigy, playing Paganini at seven and making her New York Philharmonic debut at 11. But even as a mature artist she hasn’t lost her enthusiasm or her intensity. There’s still a spirit of youth that fills her playing, and this concert too.

Mozart and Schubert are represented by virtuoso violin music they wrote in their teens, which makes for a program that darts between the spectacular and the exotic, the vivacious and the captivating. By the time he wrote his great G minor symphony (No.40) Mozart was a grown-up, but he too never lost his intensity of expression. And even Stravinsky, composing in his 60s, keeps a neoclassical twinkle in his eye.

It’s a celebration of the violin in Classical mode for the young and the young-at-heart.

STRAVINSKY Concerto in D for strings (Basel)
MOZART Violin Concerto No.5 (Turkish)
MOZART Symphony No.40
SCHUBERT Rondo in A for violin and strings

Antonello Manacorda conductor
Midori violin

 

AUDIO PLAYER LISTING

Track 1 – MOZART Symphony No.40: 1st movement
The English Concert directed by Trevor Pinnock
ARCHIV 471 677-2
Track 2 – MOZART Violin Concerto No.5: ‘Turkish’ rondo (3rd movement)
Iona Brown, violin and director, with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields
DECCA 476 2748
Track 3 – SCHUBERT Rondo in A for violin and strings
Arthur Grumiaux, violin, with the New Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Raymond Leppard
PHILIPS 442 8290

Audio kindly supplied by Universal Music

Currently available from iTunes: Mozart Symphony No.40

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