...a country (Hungary) whose population, even today, is barely over ten million has produced so many musicians and so much outstanding music. I am grateful for having been born and trained there.

Sir Georg Solti
Concerto Budapest

11 November 2022, 19.30-22.00

Grand Hall

Concerto Budapest

Mozart: Symphony No. 25 in G minor, K. 183
Chopin: Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Op. 21

INTERMISSION

Dvořák: Symphony No. 8 in G major, Op. 88

Nikolai Lugansky (piano)
Concerto Budapest
Conductor: András Keller

1994 winner of the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition Nikolai Lugansky has been entrancing Budapest audiences for many years: not only for his virtuosity but equally for his profundity and consistent maximalist drive for tonality. This year, as guest of Concerto Budapest he performs two great Chopin piano concertos. His first concert features the F minor: completed and premiered before the E minor, it was only published later, thus this popular composition is numbered second. Prior to the work by the 19-year-old Chopin, the concert opens with a recital of the 25th symphony by a 17-year-old Mozart, which in order to differentiate it from the 40th in the same key is usually called the ‘little G minor symphony’. After the intermission, the stage is set for one of the greatest hits of the 19th century Romantic – and at the same time Slav – grand orchestral repertoire: Dvořák’s Symphony No. 8 in G major composed between August and November 1889. As a way of lauding this cheerfully lyrical composition evoking the Czech landscapes and at the same time the rhythms of folk songs, it is perhaps sufficient to say that it was not even overshadowed by the New World Symphony.

Presented by

Concerto Budapest

Tickets:

HUF 2 200, 3 100, 3 900, 4 800, 5 900, 7 500