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Warsaw, Poland (Harpsichord Concerto POLISH PREMIERE)

October 12

https://filharmonia.pl/en/repertuar/chamber-music-concert-393308196
 

10.12
Tuesday / 19:00
Concert Hall (ground floor)
PLN 90

Chamber Music

Performers:

Warsaw Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra

Jan Lewtak
artistic director

Marcin Świątkiewicz
harpsichord

Johann Sebastian Bach
Harpsichord Concerto in D major, BWV 1054

Philip Glass
Concerto for Harpsichord and Orchestra

intermission

Dag Wirén
Serenade for string orchestra, Op. 11

Edvard Grieg
Holberg Suite, Op. 40  
 

In the original version of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Harpsichord Concerto in D major, BWV 1054, the solo instrument was the violin. This work was likely composed in either Köthen or Leipzig, during a period when Bach was already very familiar with the works of Antonio Vivaldi and the three-movement form of the so-called Venetian concerto. The harpsichord version of the work may have been written for the famous concerts at Leipzig’s Café Zimmermann or to provide repertoire for one of his talented sons.

Since the harpsichord renaissance, to which Wanda Landowska made a major contribution in the first half of the twentieth century, many new compositions for the instrument have been written. While often turning to the musical past, they sometimes also explore the capacities of contemporary models that are being built and constantly improved. Philip Glass joined the ranks of harpsichord enthusiasts at the beginning of this century, composing a concerto in which elements of Baroque texture and motifs are combined with repetitive structures and transparent harmonies, characteristic of this American minimalist.

The main aim of Swedish neo-classicist Dag Wirén’s pleasant and airy Serenade Op. 11 was, as its composer wrote, to put listeners in a cheerful mood. After all, the composer’s credo, which probably also accompanied work on this piece, was ‘I believe in God, Mozart and Carl Nielsen’. Edvard Grieg’s Holberg Suite, on the other hand, is a remarkably graceful archaisation created to celebrate the bicentenary of the birth of the writer known as the father of Danish theatre. It would be hard to find a more beautiful example of a Romantic composer ‘reinventing’ the musical past.

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