31
Jan
2016
31
Jan
2016
Time
Sunday 16:00
Location
Philharmonie Berlin
Great Hall
Composer
Bedřich Smetana, Antonín Leopold Dvořák, Sergei Rachmaninoff
Smetana | The Moldau | The Moldau — 31 Jan 16:00
Bedřich Smetana | The Moldau
Antonín Leopold Dvořák | Symphony Nr. 9 "Aus der Neuen Welt"
Sergei Rachmaninoff | Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18

We invite you on a musical journey through Europe: under the direction of Rimma Sushanskaya, the "German National Orchestra" presents an atmospheric concert evening in the Philharmonie Berlin with highlights by Smetana and Dvořák. The Piano Concerto by Rachmaninov is interpreted by the internationally known and experienced pianist Andrei Gavrilov.

Conductor Rimma Sushanskaya from Saint Petersburg has won several international awards and is known for the intense intensity and brilliant virtuosity of her concerts.

The German National Orchestra consists of professional musicians, including internationally known members such as the first concertmaster Guy Braunstein and the violinist Michael Barenboim.

The concert will be opened with the famous work "Die Moldau" by Bedřich Smetana from the cycle My Fatherland (Má vlast). The main motif flows concisely through this work, which was processed by Smetana from the famous Renaissance song La Mantovana and, for example, was also received in the popular Israeli national anthem.

This is followed by Sergei Rachmaninov's 2nd Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in C Minor, op.18. This work was composed by Rachmaninov between 1901 and 1902 after a serious creative crisis and seems to have been a liberation for the Russian composer. On the other hand, the romantic concert in three movements also reflects the melancholy of Rachmaninov. At the piano sits the internationally known and experienced pianist Andrei Gavrilov. Born in 1955 in a family of artists Gavrilov was able to celebrate his first successes in the 1970s, but was then imprisoned for political inconsistencies in communist Russia. In the 1980s, followed by a strong return to the concert podiums of the world, with conductors such as Claudia Abbado and Sir Simon Rattle.

Antonín Dvořák called his "New World" his ninth and final symphony, which premiered in 1893 at Carnegie Hall New York. Although the symphony was written in the United States, "Out of the New World" can not be called American music.

ARTISTS
Location
Philharmonie Berlin
ADDRESS
Herbert-von-Karajan-Str. 1, 10785 Berlin
PHONE NUMBER
Tickethotline: +49 30 254 88-0
Upcoming events
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31
Aug
2025
Su
10:00
2nd International Ferenc Fricsay Conducting Competition
Korzó Music Hall
(Sunday) 10:00
Korzó Music Hall
Széchenyi tér 9, 6720 Szeged, Hungary