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  • Palace of Arts Budapest, © Müpa Budapest
    Palace of Arts Budapest, © Müpa Budapest
  • Palace of Arts Budapest, Concert Hall, © Müpa Budapest
    Palace of Arts Budapest, Concert Hall, © Müpa Budapest
  • Palace of Arts Budapest, Festival Theatre, © Müpa Budapest
    Palace of Arts Budapest, Festival Theatre, © Müpa Budapest

Bridging Europe: De Falla, Liszt, Fischer, Dvořák

Budapest, Palace of Arts — Bela Bartok National Concert Hall

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About the Event

Join Iván Fischer and the European Union Youth Orchestra for an evening of diverse musical pieces connecting Europe. Featuring works by de Falla, Liszt, Fischer, and Dvořák.

The bridges of Europe will connect the entire continent this year: a Hungarian rhapsody follows a Spanish dance an homage to Bach precedes Czech melodies. Liszt’s work, inspired by the cimbalom, will once again be accompanied by this distinctive instrument of urban Romani music, played by Jenő Lisztes, who has captivated audiences at Carnegie Hall, the Musikverein, and the BBC Proms with the BFO. In Iván Fischer’s dance suite, bridges will stretch all the way to Brazil, America, and Argentina. The Stradivarius violin sounds “breathtaking” (The Strad) in the hands of Ukrainian violinist Diana Tishchenko’s hands, and rings with a “distinctive, individual voice” (The Gramophone). The concert, performed jointly with the youth orchestra of the EU, is the inaugural event of the European Orchestra Academy, a brand new initiative run by the two ensembles.

Not finding joy in the zarzuela genre, a folk‐like Spanish Singspiel, de Falla turned to composing operas. His piece titled Life Is Short, which is less than an hour long, is brimming with elements of Spanish and Romani folk culture. Even though it is considered an early piece, his easy familiarity with Andalucian music shines through. His enthusiasm for Moorish and transcendental motifs is also apparent. The most famous movement in the story of Salud, a heartbroken character, is the Spanish dance, in which the clever orchestra arrangement evokes the presence of a flamenco guitarist.

In the mid‐19th century, the demand for national music started emerging throughout the world. After painstakingly collecting melodies he believed to be Hungarian folk music (mostly Hungarian inspired songs by Romani musicians), Franz Liszt composed a set of 19 Hungarian rhapsodies: his most popular series to this day.

He revised six compositions originally written for solo piano to be performed by an orchestra. In the orchestrated rendition of the rhapsody honoring Joseph Joachim, the violin assumes a significant role, while the solo flute introduces the most recognizable melody of the piece. Drama, lyricism, and dance take turns, as is fitting for the genre.

A collection of stylized dances — that was the brief description of the suite. In other words, dance numbers that nobody dances to anymore because they have fallen out of fashion. But when the suites were first performed during Bach’s time, the elderly may have still remembered the dances, and may have felt nostalgic. This was Iván Fischer’s thought process when he composed his own suite of dances, whose melodies may sound similarly familiar to the contemporary audience. A Baroque prelude, a samba‐like bossa nova, syncopating ragtime, slithering tango, and swing‐based boogie‐woogie constitute the modern parody of this Bachian form.

Many say Symphony No. 7 is Dvořák’s finest piece of music. After hearing Brahms’ Symphony No. 3, the composer decided to return to the genre following a hiatus of five years. “There is not a single superfluous note in the work,” he wrote to his publisher. The piece simultaneously features heated Czech political passions and the composer’s peaceful, harmonious love for his homeland. The unexpectedly quiet and lyrical opening of the first movement came to the composer at a train station in Prague: the slow movement represents Dvořák grieving for his mother, who had recently died, and for his eldest daughter, who passed away at a young age. After the vivacious yet melancholy scherzo, the piece concludes with an exotic finale.

A joint concert of the BFO and the European Union Youth Orchestra, a joint production of Müpa Budapest and the BFO.

Program

  • Manuel de Falla – Spanish Dance No. 1 from La Vida Breve
  • Franz Liszt – Hungarian Rhapsody No. 4 in D Minor
  • Iván Fischer – Dance Suite for Violin and Orchestra, In Memoriam J. S. Bach
  • Antonín Dvořák – Symphony No. 7 in D Minor, Op. 70
Program is subject to change

Artists

Conductor, Violoncello da Spalla: Ivan Fischer

Ivan Fischer is one of the world's most sought‐after conductors. Chief Conductor of the Konzerthausorchester Berlin since the 2012/13 season, he was the founder of the Budapest Festival Orchestra in 1983, and he enjoys a close partnership with the Vienna State Opera. Ivan Fischer has won numerous awards, and he has performed in practically every major concert house in the world.

Orchestra: European Union Youth Orchestra

The history of the European Union Youth Orchestra (EUYO) began in 1974 when the European Parliament’s Committee on Cultural Affairs and Youth laid the foundations of the orchestra. Their aim was to create a musical workshop where talented young European musicians could work together under the direction of internationally recognised great conductors to create productions to be performed each year in many cities of Europe.
With its realisation the European Union added to this goal that the orchestra should set an example of co‐operation with its work, demonstrating the achievement and creativity of European youth. The ensemble made its debut in 1978 under the direction of Claudio Abbado. Over the years leading conductors (Barenboim, Bernstein, Carlo Maria Giulini, Bernard Haitink, Karajan, Zubin Mehta, Rostropovich, Georg Solti) have worked with the orchestra. 140 young musicians are active in the EUYO. Each year more than four thousand young musicians aged between 14 and 23 apply to join the orchestra.

Violin: Diana Tishchenko
Harpsichord: Jenö Lisztes

Palace of Arts

MÜPA Budapest is a multipurpose cultural and arts centre, situated in the Millenium Quarter of Budapest. The former 'Palace of Arts' houses three cultural institutions - the Bartok National Concert Hall, the Festival Theatre, and the Ludwig Museum. Opened in 2005, the centre was immediately recognised for its state-of-the-art architecture and functionally sleek interior. The MÜPA's objective is to introduce modern arts while appreciating old traditions, and to make Hungarian art more accessible to a wider audience. The Bartok Concert Hall houses a magnificent organ, one of the largest in Europe. The complex presents events of many kinds, from opera to dance and concerts of contemporary music.

Antonín Dvořák

Antonin Dvorak is considered to be one of the most well-known and prominent Czechs in the world, as his musical work gained international recognition already during his lifetime. He was born in 1841 in a small Czech village into a butcher’s family. At the age of 6, Dvorak started taking violin lessons and it immediately became obvious that the boy had exceptional talent in music. Later in life, he was learning to master piano and organ as well as simultaneously working in a slaughterhouse. After Dvorak turned 16, he was admitted to the Organ School in Prague that trained future professional composers. After graduating, he stayed in Prague, joined Karel Komzak’s orchestra and started actively composing his own music. However, he struggled to make ends meet and always had to work on the side by playing music in churches and giving private music lessons. Finally, 1874 became a turning point in his life when he won a financial grant from an Austrian Prize competition for his 15 submitted works. This allowed him to quit the orchestra and devote himself fully to composing. During this period, he wrote his Slavonic Dances, Moravian Duets and Violin Concerto, which brought him sweeping success. In 1892 he was invited to teach at the New York National Conservatory, where he stayed until 1895 before returning home. He started teaching at the Prague conservatory and later became its director. Until his death in 1904, he had been a successful and well-loved composer, both in his homeland and around the whole world.

Franz Liszt

Franz Liszt was a Hungarian composer, pianist and conductor of the 19th century Romantic era. He was well-known for his prodigious virtuosic skill as a pianist all over Europe. In fact, he was one of the most prominent representatives of the New German School (Neudeutsche Schule) as a composer. Over the course of his career he created extensive and diverse bodies of works that influenced contemporaries and anticipated many 20th-century ideas and trends. For instance, his most notable musical contributions were the invention of the symphonic poem, making radical departures in harmony and developing the concept of thematic transformation as part of his experiments in musical form.

Address

Palace of Arts, Komor Marcell sétány 1., Budapest, Hungary — Google Maps

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