25 October 2022, 19.30-22.00
Grand Hall
Organ in the Centre
László Deák & Mónika Kecskés Presented by Liszt Academy
J. S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G major, BWV 1048 (arranged by Mónika Kecskés)
Mónika Kecskés, László Deák (organ)
Peeters: Toccata, fugue and hymn on Ave maris stella, Op. 28
Mónika Kecskés (organ)
Dupré: Symphony No. 2 in C-sharp minor for Organ, Op. 26
László Deák (organ)
INTERMISSION
Naji Hakim: Rhapsody
Mónika Kecskés, László Deák (organ)
Eben: Sunday Music – 4. Finale
Mónika Kecskés (organ)
Csajkovszkij: The Nutcracker Suite, Op. 71a (arranged by Alexander Därr)
Mónika Kecskés, László Deák (organ)
László Deák and Mónika Kecskés currently teach at the Szent István Király Secondary School of Music and the Faculty of Arts of the Széchenyi University of Győr. In addition to their pedagogical work, they are the organists of the Franciscan Church in Budapest. They refined their artistic skills in Paris, London and Vienna, and achieved outstanding results in many prestigious international organ competitions. The couple will treat the audience to musical curiosities at today’s performance. After the four-hand transcript of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, we will hear Johannes Brahms’s Prelude and Fugue in G minor, composed by the author on the basis of Bach’s famous Toccata and Fugue in D Minor. Marcel Dupré's Organ Symphony No. 2, which is rarely played in Hungarian concert halls, will be performed for the first time on the renovated organ of the Grand Hall. French composer of Lebanese descent Naji Hakim evokes dancing characters in his rhapsody, and the Finale from Petr Eben’s Sunday Music elaborates on the melody of the Gregorian antiphon Salve Regina. The concert will end with Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite, which is also the Hungarian premiere of the transcript.
Presented by
Liszt Academy Concert Centre
Tickets:
1 800, 2 300, 2 900 Ft
Concert series:
Other events in the concert series:
19:30
19:30