Please allow me that, apart from my regrettable ignorance of the Hungarian language, I remain Magyar in my heart and soul from birth to the grave. As a consequence, I earnestly wish to further the progress of Hungarian music.

Liszt to Antal Augusz
Concerto Budapest

19 April 2024, 19.30-22.00

Grand Hall

Volumes II

Concerto Budapest

Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor, Op. 15
Shostakovich: Symphony No. 10 in E minor, Op. 93

Elisabeth Leonskaja (piano)
Concerto Budapest
Conductor: András Keller

It is always a fantastic and festive occasion when the audience is able to greet the grand old lady of piano playing, Elisabeth Leonskaja. Although she is approaching the end of her seventies, the freshness of her playing is still astonishing. This fact will be proven by this concert, where she will play Brahms’s Piano Concerto in D minor, which demands complete physical and intellectual presence from the soloist. The world premiere of the concerto in 1859 was received with complete confusion, but, only a few years later, it became one of the fundamental works of the concert repertoire. Almost a hundred years later, in December 1953, Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 was performed in Leningrad under entirely different circumstances. Excitement and positive expectations preceded the premiere, as it meant that, after eight years of silence, the witch hunt of Zhdanov’s cultural policy and, of course, Stalin’s death, the composer returned to the genre of the symphony. The Symphony, conducted this time by András Keller, is particularly remarkable with respect to its shortest second movement, as this famous and aggressive scherzo depicts a portrait of the Soviet tyrant through music.

Presented by

Concerto Budapest

Tickets:

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