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Kazushi Ono
conductor
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Boris Giltburg
piano
Together with star pianist Boris Giltburg, we celebrate the Beethoven Year 2027 in style. In four unique double-bill concerts, we join musical forces for a truly unique series: before the intermission, Giltburg performs a selection of Beethoven's sonatas; after the intermission, the orche ...
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Together with star pianist Boris Giltburg, we celebrate the Beethoven Year 2027 in style. In four unique double-bill concerts, we join musical forces for a truly unique series: before the intermission, Giltburg performs a selection of Beethoven's sonatas; after the intermission, the orchestra mirrors them with symphonic repertoire.
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A laboratory for ideas
Beethoven used his sonatas as a laboratory for ideas. Written for intimate settings and far removed from the pressures of the concert hall, they offered a safe haven where he could experiment, test, and innovate to his heart's content. His final sonata is the culmination of all those years of pushing boundaries. Beethoven relentlessly challenges the limits of both instrument and performer, opening the door to a higher, mystical world.Eighty years later, this fusion of a spiritual world and a radical structure inspired Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. He modeled his Second Symphony entirely on the architecture of Beethoven’s Opus 111: a strict diptych that opens dramatically and with great complexity, moving through a lyrical theme to end in a grandly scaled fugue, with ultimate redemption in an overwhelming apotheosis.