hun/ eng
search
my basket
Nicolas Altstaedt Marco Borggreve_cropped.jpg _39A3903 3 3_lr[2].jpg Sigrid_Ok_Site
Add to calendar

Baroque concert: Handel, Caldara, Vivaldi

Kim, Altstaedt, T’Hooft

2023
January9, 7:45 P.M.
Add to calendar

Program

Antonio Vivaldibio:
Cello Concerto in A minor, RV 419

Antonio Caldarabio:
Concerto in D minor for Cello and Two Violins

INTERVAL

George Frideric Handelbio:
Concerto Grosso in D minor, Op. 6, No. 10, HWV 328

George Frideric Handelbio:
Tra le fiamme (Among the Flames) – Cantata, HWV 170

Featuring

Artistic director

Soloist

Featuring

Baroque gestures

Costume designer


Other information

Season tickets

  • ORMÁNDY
  • WINTER EVENINGS

The event is about 2.5 hours long.

About the event

Countertenor Kangmin Justin Kim might as well have come from a K-pop band: to his extravagant, cheeky style is added a voice that has landed him in the top lists of several international classical music magazines. He will be the soloist of the ensemble led by Nicolas Altstaedt. The cellist “is an artist in a category on his own” as a reviewer in the Hamburger Abendblatt put it. We can also learn from other reviews that, behind the charming looks, there are musical extremes, incredible technique, warm tone colors and direct communication. This fire and audacity will meet one of the most beautiful vocal works of the Baroque period, the masterpieces of the cello literature, Handel’s tales, Caldara’s elegance, Vivaldi’s freshness and Sigrid T’Hooft’s authentic stage gesture to provide a truly unforgettable Baroque program with period instruments.

The kaleidoscopic linking of the instruments of the string orchestra – this is the basis of the ever-fascinating diversity of Handel’s Twelve Grand Concertos, Op. 6, composed within a single month. In the first movement of the piece in D minor, resembling a dance suite, a meticulous French overture with dotted notes is followed by the complex and often dramatic fugue. Next comes the melancholic Air in stile antico and then a fast movement resembling an allemande and a courante. The piece is concluded by a cheerful gavotte-like finale, playing with the contrast of the high and low strings.

Born in Venice, composer of great concertos and called Antonio but not Vivaldi – who is it? Although you can rarely meet Caldara’s name in today’s concert halls, he was a significant composer in his own age, whose music was often studied by Bach. He played several string instruments and was especially attracted to the cello. He wrote the Concerto in D minor while he was a court composer in Austria. The elegant and dramatic opening movement, built on imitation, is followed by a siciliano style Adagio and then the light and lively finale.

Vivaldi, who was two years younger than Caldara, also followed the three movement concerto structure of the Venetian School. In his concertos, instead of a group of instruments, a soloist plays against the orchestra. He composed his Cello Concerto in A minor, one of his more than 25 concertos written for the instrument, shortly before his death. In the first movement, an aria from the oratorio Juditha triumphans appears. The chromatic music conjures up the image of a swallow tossed about by the raging wind. After the slow movement, the finale combines the rondo and the variation form.

Imprisoned by King Minos, Daedalus and his son chose a very special way of escaping. The great craftsman father builds a wing from feathers glued together with wax. However, the disobedient and curious Icarus flies too close to the sun, the wax melts and the greedy son drowns in the sea. As rumor had it, the 22-year-old Handel courted a prince’s mistress, so Benedetto Pamphili’s edifying and allegorical text used by the composer for the beautiful cantata embellished by a remarkable viola da gamba solo might have been addressed to her.

Did you know? Händel's Concerto Grosso in D minor was written in 1739 and his Cantata in 1707; Caldara's Concerto in D minor was composed between 1716 and 1736 and Vivaldi's Cello Concerto in A minor comes from the early 1740s. The Festival Orchestra last performed the concerto grosso on 26 December 2013 (conductor: Iván Fischer), and will perform the other works for the first time.

Contemporary events The Anglo-Scottish philosopher David Hume published his essay A Treatise of Human Nature in 1739 / the first edition of the French-language memoirs of Ferenc Rákóczi II, published in The Hague in 1739 / on 13 June 1707, the Diet of Ónod demanded the dethronement of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I / in 1707 the English physicist, mathematician and astronomer Isaac Newton published his collection of algebraic works, Arithmetica universalis / On 7 April 1724, Johann Sebastian Bach's St John Passion was premiered in Leipzig / the German philosopher Christian Wolff, a leading figure of the early Enlightenment, was convicted of atheism in 1723, deprived of his university chair and expelled from Halle / Canaletto (Giovanni Antonio Canal), Italian painter painted his picture of Venice - the Molo with Santa Maria della Salute in 1740 / Giuseppe Tartini wrote his Violin Concerto in C major in 1740

Full description