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MAHLER CHAMBER ORCHESTRA

10 June 2013 – 11 June 2013

Venue: Concert Hall  View Seat Map
Presented by: Sydney Opera House

"The plaintive warmth of the string playing was beyond belief." New York Times

Book both evening programs (10 - 11 June) and save 25%! Call 02 9250 7777 to book now!

Description

CONDUCTOR DANIEL HARDING  |  FOUNDER CLAUDIO ABBADO

The finest musicians from over 20 European countries, stellar conductors and a globetrotting schedule, the Mahler Chamber Orchestra (MCO) is one of the most acclaimed ensembles on the scene. MCO was established 15 years ago by luminary conductor Claudio Abbado with the vision of being an independent international orchestra of the highest calibre. By 2008, the French newspaper Le Monde was calling the MCO “the best orchestra in the world”. The core membership of 45 musicians live all over Europe and tour up to 200 days a year, in repertoire ranging from baroque to contemporary, and from opera to symphonies. Whatever they play, they play with a ‘chamber’ philosophy: intimate interplay between musicians, intensity and attentiveness. Every concert is an adventure.

Purchase tickets to both programs and save 10%*. Phone 02 9250 7777 to book this offer.

PROGRAM 1: BEETHOVEN’S VIOLIN CONCERTO
10 JUNE 2013, 7PM
CONCERT HALL


DEAN Testament
BEETHOVEN Violin Concerto
SCHUMANN
Symphony No.3 Rhenish

SOLOIST Christian Tetzlaff, Violin

Composers like Beethoven and Schumann are the foundation of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra’s repertoire, the gold standard of an orchestra’s prowess. Christian Tetzlaff and his ventriloquist’s skill for letting a composer speak through his playing will make this performance of Beethoven’s concerto unforgettable. Under the baton of conductors like Daniel Harding, Schumann’s symphonies are at last being heard for the works of genius they are. The Rhenish is full of high-spirits, high ideals – the work of a Romantic visionary in love with nature and with life.

FIND OUT MORE & TO BOOK PROGRAM 1, 10 JUNE
 
PROGRAM 2: SHOSTAKOVICH AND DVOŘÁK
11 JUNE 2013, 7PM
CONCERT HALL


HENZE Sonata for strings
SHOSTAKOVICH
Cello Concerto No.1, Op.107
DVOŘÁK Symphony No.9 From the New World

SOLOIST Alisa Weilerstein, Cello

Shostakovich’s white-knuckle cello concerto is the ideal vehicle for Alisa Weilerstein, whose intense and dramatic reading of this work has a devastating power. Shostakovich is emblematic of the bitter facts of Soviet Russian life but Dvořák’sSymphony No.9 is the optimistic opposite, born in a new world. This portrait of the golden age of 19th-Century America was premiered, aptly, in Carnegie Hall. Both are ideal showcases for the brilliant Mahler Chamber Orchestra.

FIND OUT MORE & TO BOOK PROGRAM 2, 11 JUNE 

Artist Information

DANIEL HARDING, CONDUCTOR

CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF, VIOLIN

ALISA WEILERSTEIN, CELLO 

DANIEL HARDING, CONDUCTOR

In 2011, Daniel Harding was designated lifetime Conductor Laureate of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra, the summation of a 14-year relationship with the orchestra as Principal Conductor. Harding shares the MCO’s adventurous spirit. He says, “I think the MCO is about quality, concentration, passion and a fanatical devotion to the music.” The same could be said about him. A protégé of Sir Simon Rattle and Claudio Abbado, Harding made his professional debut in 1994 and has led some of the world’s most prestigious orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic, the LSO, the Concertgebouw and LA Philharmonic, as well as maintaining a presence on the podiums of the world’s major opera houses. The 36-year-old already has the credentials and the maturity to be a consequential conductor and a leader for a new generation of musicians.

Harding explores the orchestral heartland in two magnificent Romantic symphonies. Dvořák’s New World Symphony is as vast and energetic as the wide-open spaces of the United States which inspired it. At its core is the hushed dignity of the famous Largo, which gave us the spiritual ‘Goin’ Home’. Robert Schumann’s Rhenish Symphony is a euphoric portrait Germany’s Rhineland in its many moods from quiet dawn on the river to the power and nobility of ancient cathedrals.

CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF, VIOLIN

“What ultimately moves people is the emotional openness and deep sincerity of Tetzlaff’s playing.”  Jeremy Eichler, Boston Globe

Beethoven Violin Concerto in D, Op.61

Christian Tetzlaff’s uncompromising approach to playing has made him one of the most fascinating and formidable musicians you’ll ever hear. Whether he’s performing solo sonatas by JS Bach or a Romantic warhorse concerto, he inhabits the music, perfectly realising the composer’s intentions, with flawless technique and impeccable taste. Of course, virtuosity is the norm among today’s musicians, but what distinguishes Tetzlaff is his nearly ego-less devotion to the music he performs - he’ll even avoid certain pieces that he regards as too flashy. Tetzlaff is a musician first and a virtuoso violinist second. This immersive approach to music-making has earned him a cult following of musicians and audiences, and international accolades.

Beethoven’s Violin Concerto is a piece that deserves Tetzlaff’s bracing combination of intellect and emotion. This trusty staple of the concert platform risks becoming dulled by over-familiarity, but Tetzlaff polishes it to gleaming newness, joining the threads of this massive work into a cohesive design. Unfolding in magisterial breadth, the concerto positions the violinist as hero in an epic drama – the one against the many. Tetlaff is the ideal protagonist, first subduing the orchestra, then dreaming with it in a central movement of aching loveliness before finally leading it in a joyous dance.

 

ALISA WEILERSTEIN, CELLO

Shostakovich Cello Concerto No.1 in E-flat Major, Op.107

“Her technical abilities serve a taste for sweep and intensity; she performs with soulful expression and physical abandon.” New York Times

Alisa Weilerstein has quickly become one of the most sought-after musicians of her generation, and the heir-apparent to the title of Great American Cellist. Intense, sensitive and spontaneous, Weilerstein is a natural communicator as well as a commanding virtuoso. In 2011, her accomplishments were recognised with a MacArthur Fellowship, the ‘Genius Grant’ which frees its recipients to pursue their art to its highest peaks. She’s just 30 years old and her CV already lists the accomplishments of an international soloist: the A-list orchestras and star conductors she’s worked with. But what quickly becomes apparent when watching her is that Weilerstein is that she is completely in love with the cello, with performing and with her fellow musicians.

Weilerstein performs the emotionally and technically demanding First Cello Concerto of Dmitri Shostakovich, one of the most searing musical statements in 20th century music. Sorrowful and sarcastic, bitter and biting, the cello concerto, like many of Shostakovich’s best works is a deeply, almost disturbing, personal utterance, embroidered with his own musical ‘monogram’. The Independent says it best: “Weilerstein was the complete musical actress whose orations from hushed and furtive and fearful to ferociously assertive were gripping in the extreme.  We must cast our minds back to Rostropovich to remember an account of the slow movement as potent and technically accomplished as this.”

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Pricing Information

Prices correct at the time of publication and subject to change without notice. Exact prices will be displayed with seat selection.

Standard $35 - $165
Insiders $35 - $132
Concession* $35 - $150
Buy 2**: Program 1 & 2 $35 - $148.50
Booking fee applies per transaction

$8.50 - Contact Centre
$8.50 - Internet
$5.00 - Box Office Counter

Pricing Information Explained

Pricing Information Explained

*Concessions include Australian pensioners and Australian full-time students.

**Not available in conjunction with any other offer. Tickets must be purchased by the same person, in the same transaction and in the same reserve for each program. Offer only available by phone and not available online.

For events which offer concession pricing, if you purchase concession tickets, please ensure you have your Proof of Concession with you when you attend an event.

Ticket Booking Enquiries: For all general booking enquiries please email the Contact Centre or call on +61 2 9250 7777 for more information.

Groups Bookings: Please email the Group Booking team or call on +61 2 9250 7700 for more information.

Insider Prices: Insiders are Sydney Opera House members. Insiders get waived booking fees, up to 20% off Sydney Opera House Presents shows and more. More Info

Reviews

"The orchestra sounded superb, light and robust, graceful and full." New York Sun

"The plaintive warmth of the string playing was beyond belief." New York Times

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