Program


Concertino sorozat: Mozart, Weber, Bottesini, Mendelssohn

Concertino sorozat: Mozart, Weber, Bottesini, Mendelssohn

Rudolf Szitka (clarinet) • Zsolt Fejérvári (double bass) • Leader: János Pilz

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Last event date: Sunday, October 28 2018 3:30PM

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Divertimento in B-flat major, K. 137Carl Maria von Weber: Clarinet Quintet in B-flat major, Op. 34Giovanni Bottesini: Concerto No. 2 in B minor for Double BassFelix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy: String Symphony No. 7 in D minorThe BFO announces a new chamber music series entitled Concertino, where musicians will make their debuts as soloists. In the spotlight will be concert pieces and winners of the orchestra’s Sándor Végh Competition: this time, Rudolf Szitka and Zsolt Fejérvári.Returning to the Italian Cultural Institute the chamber ensemble of the BFO will set the tone of the concert with Mozart’s dance-like Divertimento.Weber, primarily known for his operas, is expertly able to showcase the personality of each instrument in his entertaining and fresh chamber music pieces, especially when it comes to the winds. He wrote several pieces for the clarinet, dedicating the majority of them to the German clarinet virtuoso Heinrich Baermann. His concerto-like clarinet quintet demands extraordinary musical skill and incorporates the drama, playfulness and excitement of the opera.Giovanni Bottesini, a friend of Verdi’s, was both a composer and the conductor at the premiere of Aida. The sweeping melodies of his concerto for double bass could be taken for arias in an imaginary opera from the time of Verdi, as Zsolt Fejérvári, the second soloist of the concert, observed. “For a double bass player, it is a wonderful task – and a real challenge – to ‘sing’ these beautiful melodies. Rarely is our instrument in the spotlight; its usual role is to provide the bass backing for the overall harmony of the musical fabric of the orchestra,” he says.Mendelssohn wrote twelve string symphonies between the ages of 12 and 14. No. 7, which will wrap up the concert this evening, differs from most of the others in that it is composed of four movements. In the first, the audience will witness a heated fight emerging; in the second, we stroll along in a major key, only to then arrive at the sizzling dance of the closing movement.

Our offer


The Concertino series, featuring works for chamber orchestra, this time launches a musical expedition to the north.

Six composers, six pieces, sixty-six years, but nothing diabolical. In fact, several aspects of the season’s only performance to be hosted at the BMC will direct the audience’s gaze skywards towards the heavens. We may rightfully label the evening a contemporary concert, although only one of the pieces on the program, featuring works composed between 1940 and 2006, was written after the turn of the millennium.

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