I Maestri<br />promoting young conductors &amp; soloists<br />
  • Next events
  • Home
  • The Orchestra
  • The Musicians
    • The Artistic Director
    • The Conductors
    • The Soloists
    • Orchestra members
  • Concerts
    • 2011-2012
    • Past concert seasons
  • Photo Gallery
  • Multimedia
    • Flyers
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Programme notes
  • Blog
  • Contact us
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture

Picture





















































































































































































































































































We are returning by popular demand to Berlin's Franzosische Dom this March 24th to perform with the legendary Oud and violin player Yair Dalal. He will play his own music from which is of middle eastern flavour from the Jewish Iraqi tradition.

We will also play with him music from Dimitrae Cantemir from 17th century Ottoman culture and other music from this early period.

Also featured in this concert is cellist Yann Merker who will now be playing Vivaldi's cello concerto in A minor, rv. 419

We will open the concert with Telemann's Tafelmusik Overture and Conclusion and also feature George Hlawiczka and Malcolm Allison in Bach's Double concerto and Brandenburg Concerto no, 3.

I hope you can come and support us at this wonderful venue!

You can book tickets at the following link:


https://www.classictic.com/en/i_maestri_present_east_meets_west/44350/436969/

or

http://www.eventim.de/east-meets-west-beethoven-sinfonie-orchester-london-berlin-tickets.html?affiliate=EVE&doc=artistPages%2Ftickets&fun=artist&action=tickets&key=2118333%2410517643&jumpIn=yTix&kuid=&hideArtist=true&from=erdetaila






























































​
Mozart Overture Abduction from Serail 
Brahms Concerto for violin and cello
Schubert Symphony no. 4, ‘Tragic'
George Hlawiczka, violin
Thomas Gregory, cello
I Maestri Orchestra
Conducted by Cathal Garvey and Rachael Young 
Join us for this heartwarming music whose value and passion will never die. Three of the most loved composers and all works masterpieces. Mozarts Abduction to Serail is a based in the Ottoman sultan's hareem and was composer shortly after the Ottoman threat to Vienna had retreated. The overture is high spirit and witty.
Brahms' Concerto for Violin and Cello was written for his friend Joachim as a reconciliation after years of a break in communication as Brahms was upset that his friend had accused his, Joachim's wife of adultery and subsequently divorced her. The work is also the cello concerto he never wrote and he wrote it for Joachim's quartet cellist, Hausmann.
Schubert's 4th symphony we never performed in his lifetime and is the only other symphony after the unfinished to be written in a minor key. It is a truly heartfelt work and very apt to be played in our Easter concert to express to passion of Christ.
I do hope you will come to enjoy a wonderful evening of truly beautiful music.

​We invite you to this wonderful and passionate programme on a cold January night.

We will feature the luscious 2nd piano concerto by Rachmaninov with Mine Dogantan Dack. We are also proud to present one of Tchaikovsky's neglected masterpieces, his Hamlet Overture Fantasy, one of three works he composed to Shakepeare's plays and perhaps the most powerful.


Bortkiewicz is a Ukrainian Polish composer who fled the Russian empire after the 1st world war, first living in Turkey and then Switzerland. His first symphony is a longing testament for his homeland, the 2nd symphony of a more personal nature.

We eagerly look the forward to exploring this music and hope you will also be curious to discover a lost and forgotten composer.

Tickets: £15 and £12 (concessions)
Advance tickets: £12 and £9 (concessions)
(10% booking fee applicable)

Visit:

http://www.wegottickets.com/event/421784
Box office opens at 6pm



​
I Maestri present

Finlandiato commemorate 100 years since Finish Independence 

Sibelius is Finlands national composer and one of the true genius in music. We present his national anthem overture, Finlandia, written to protest against Russian rule and also his last symphony which is regarded as one of the best symphonies of all time. It is in one movement and last just 22 minutes but it evokes a whole universe.

His Valse Triste is built on the last bars of the Symphony and a very apt way to end the concert as it is a reminiscence.

We also feature a work by his pupil, Toivo Kuula, whose life and work was cut short by the 1st work world war.
Mine Dogantan Dack performs finally Beethoven's grand Emperor Concerto.

​Tickets: £15 and £12 (concessions)
Advance tickets: £12 and £9 (concessions)
(10% booking fee applicable)

Visit:

http://www.wegottickets.com/event/421784
Box office opens at 6pm

I Maestri present

España


Come and celebrate an evening of Spanish music and dance on this exhilarating program featuring John Carmichael's Concierto Folklorico, written in this arrangement for our pianists, Carlos Lama and Sophia Cabruja.

We open with Chabrier's famous Espana Rhapsody for large orchestra which was first performed at the Ciruqe Olympique. It became an overnight success and Mahler even declaired it to be the start if moern music.

In the second half of our concert we feature the Suite no. 1 from Falla's ballet The Three-cornered Hat and end with two of Ravel's beloved works, the Alborada del Gracioso and Rhapsodie espagnole which was also one of his early successful tone poems based on spanish music which was at the time very much in fasion in France.

Tickets: £15 and £12 concessions (on the door)
Advance Tickets: £12 and £9 concessions
(10% booking fee applicable)
Visit: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/412125
Box office opens at 6pm
​


Box office opens at 6pmI Maestri present

Elegy

​I Maestri present their first concert of this season with Thomas Gregory as Cello soloist in Elgar's brooding Cello Concerto, conducted by Cathal Garvey and finishing the programme, George Hlawiczka conducts Tchaikovsky's epic Symphony no. 5.


Tickets: £15 and £12 concessions (on the door)

Advance Tickets: £12 and £9 concessions
(10% booking fee applicable)

​Visit:
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/412108

​
Box office opens at 6pm









​

​

I Maestri’s final concerts of the season present a rarely performed early work by Jean Sibelius along with his much loved First Symphony. The importance of Jean Sibelius’ music to the people of Finland, especially at the beginning of the 20th century, cannot be overstated. Sibelius was an ardent Finnish nationalist, and his music, particularly Finlandia and his symphonic poems, became a central rallying cry for the Finnish people in their fight to preserve their linguistic, cultural and political independence. However, Sibelius also clearly stated that his symphonies should not be viewed through the lens of an extra-musical program. “My symphonies are worked out as musical expression without the slightest literary basis,” he explained. “I’m not a literary musician. For me, music begins where words leave off … A symphony should be music first and last.” But, as musicologist James Hepokoski points out, Sibelius’ insistence that his symphonies were purely musical did not prevent Sibelius from using the First Symphony for non-musical ends. In the summer of 1900, the Helsinki Philharmonic toured Europe with it, using it to garner support for the Finnish cause against Russia.

Despite his nationalist sentiments Sibelius was very much inspired by the music of Tchaikovsky and his first symphony is especially full of this romanticism. The other work on our program is the wonderful Violin Concerto that Tchaikovsky wrote after a trip to Switzerland with the young violinist Yosif Kotek. This trip was taken after he cancelled a wedding to his patron Nadezhka von Meck due to his sexual orientation. Perhaps because of this holiday with the young violinist, the work is very fresh and full of ardent feelings, with a feeling of freedom.

We also present Marion Willmann, the wonderful soprano who was for many years the singing partner to Russell Watson. Bach's Arbarme Dich (Have Mercy) is the beautiful Aria for Contralto and solo violin from his Matthew Passion.

Tickets: Adult £15 and Concessions £12 (on the door)

Advance tickets: Adult £11 and Concessions £9
(10% booking fee applicable)

tickets for the 17th June:
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/402208

tickets for the 18th June:
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/402303


Box Office opens at 6pm on the 17th and 4pm on the 18th June.

Please note that tickets will not be posted out and need to be collected from the Box Office on the day of the performance.


​
I Maestri's May Concert introduce a UK premiere of Riccardo Romano's, ‘The Passion’ which is based on Bach’s St Matthew Passion. Nino Rota is a composer of many well-known film scores including The Godfather and we shall present one of his orchestral works which is based on a song about love. To end our programme, we present Dvorak’s ‘New World’ Symphony with the beautiful Cor Anglais solo in the slow movement.

Concert programme:


Riccardo Romano - The Passion (UK premiere) 

Nino Rota - Sinfonia sopra una canzone d'amore 

Dvorak Symphony No. 9, Op. 95 'From the New World'

Tickets: Adult £15 and Concessions £12 (on the door)

Advance tickets: Adult £11 and Concessions £9
(10% booking fee applicable)

Visit: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/389749

Box Office opens at 6pm 

Please note that tickets will not be posted out and need to be collected from the Box Office on the day of the performance.
​

​

I Maestri’s Easter Concert explores an all Berlioz programme of narrative music that emanates the romantic musical idea of innocent love; portrayed through unexpected effects in sound, tumultuous and Shakespearean depth of passion. 

Berlioz has long been a favourite in this country but more for his orchestral music, the Symphonie fantastique above all, than for his operas and in 1844 he compiled the concert overture, Le Carnaval Romain (‘The Roman Carnival’), from material of the failed opera, Benvenuto Cellini. The overture is full of energy, exuberance and brilliance of colour. There is no more exciting beginning to any concert programme that brings a youthful character of innocence and joy.

Les Nuits d'été is possibly set to six poems from Gautier's collection; La comédie de la mort (The Comedy of Death) and Berlioz tells a story of loves virtue that leads to a dark sombre end.

The symphony fantastique is a piece of programme music that tells the story of an artist gifted with a lively imagination who has poisoned himself with opium in the depths of despair because of hopeless, unrequited love. The music illustrates the story rather garishly and explicitly through its illustrative musical writing. Perhaps this is in true, a symphonic ‘Soap Opera’ full of obscene dramatic display; a ‘Comedy of Death’.


​

Picture

​Join us in Berlin for our German debut with the quintessential German programme including Beethoven's 'Eroica' Symphony and the Prometheus Overture from which the Symphony evolved.
The wonderful pianist Theodosia Ntokou joins us in Beethoven's much love Piano Concert no. 3.
Tickets available at:
http://www.eventim.de/Tickets.html?affiliate=EVE&doc=artistPages%2Ftickets&fun=artist&action=tickets&erid=1822494&includeOnlybookable=true&x10=1&x11=eroica
​

____________________________________________________________
Concert Programme:

Rachmaninov - Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op. 43
Sibelius - Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43

I Maestri Orchestra
Soloist: Mine Doğantan Dack - Piano
Conductors: George Hlawiczka and Gabriel Drossart 

I Maestri’s March Concert explores two well know works by Rachmaninov and Sibelius which reflect the social and personal struggles of their homeland. Rachmaninov left Russia as he did not agree with the changes of the Russia he loved and Finland was undergoing its share of turmoil at the turn of the twentieth century, beginning to buckle with nationalistic fervour against the yoke of its Russian occupiers.

Tickets: Adult £15 and Concessions £12 (on the door)

Advance tickets: Adult £11 and Concessions £9
(10% booking fee applicable)

Visit: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/386698

Box Office opens at 6:30pm 

Please note that tickets will not be posted out and need to be collected from the Box Office on the day of the performance.
​____________________________________________________________
I Maestri celebrates the New Year with a musically inspired programme of concerts works as featured in the Walt Disney Film; Fantasia 2000. Bringing together the best and most popular parts of the soundtrack to life, you can experience a large full orchestra in its making.

Concert Programme:

Beethoven - Symphony no. 5, 1st Movement
Suk - Scherzo Fantastique
Respighi - Pines of Rome
Dukas - Sorcerer’s Apprentice
Stravinsky - Firebird Suite (1919)

Conductors: George Hlawiczka, Iain Hellen and Luke Cleghorn



Tickets: Adult £15 and Concessions £12 (on the door)

Advance tickets: Adult £11 and Concessions £9
(10% booking fee applicable)

Box Office opens at 6pm 

Please note that tickets will not be posted out and need to be collected from the Box Office on the day of the performance.

​_____________________________________________________________

Concert Programme:

Weber – Der Freischutz Overture, Op. 77
Weber – Concertino for Clarinet and Orchestra in E♭ major, Op. 26
Dvořák – Slavonic Dances No. 2 & 8, Op. 46
Dvořák - Symphony No. 8 in G major, Op. 88
 
Joan Enric Lluna – Conductor and Clarinet
 
I Maestri continues its musical journey with a musically inspired programme of Weber and Dvořák, who drew upon German and Czech folk music from the lands of Bohemia. Our Christmas concert is not as it seems conventional but a reflection on the times before the present.  Music and dance have always played an important role in times of festivities and celebration, and our concert programme captures these elements, along with musical drama, tragedy and romance.
 
Concertino has two meanings: In the days of Corelli and Bach, it was the smaller part of the orchestra playing rather as a solo instrument against the larger, or ripieno part, in a Concerto Grosso. In the Romantic period, it was simply a shorter and lighter type of concerto. Weber's Concertino lasts about nine minutes. It begins dramatically, with full orchestra, but then alternates between pastoral and energetic episodes. The final portion has an unexpected repeat two-note motif on the horns, a reminder of the love Weber had for the brass in general and horns in particular ... a characteristic further developed by Weber's greatest champion, Richard Wagner.
I Maestri celebrate their 15 year anniversary with a Spanish flair of heated passion and romance, and opens the concert with the overture to Bizet's seductive Carmen. 16 year old Violinist Leora Cohen will perform Lalo's virtuosic Symphonie Espagnole, and Falla's Nights in the Gardens of Spain will be performed by the Turkish pianist Mine Dogantan-Dack. This magical work evokes the smells and sounds of a garden in Spain at night and has a wonderful climax featuring Wagner's Tristan opening. We end this dazzling concert with yet more seduction in Ravel's Bolero. 

Programme:

Bizet - Carmen Overture
Lalo - Symphonie Espagnole
Falla - Nights in the Gardens of Spain
Ravel - Bolero

Leora Cohen - Violin
Mine Dogantan-Dack - Piano
George Hlawiczka, Jörg Hammann, Anastasios Strikos – Conductors

To Book tickets for our next very special concert visit: 

http://www.sjss.org.uk/events/i-maestri-gala-night-gardens-spain


Our December concert highlights almost 100 years of the Finnish declaration of independence and 150th year of Jean Sibelius’s birth. 

Widely recognized as his country's national composer, Sibelius is often credited for supporting the rise of the Finnish national identity in the country's struggle for independence.
The celebration  will end Finlandia, a symphonic poem written in 1899 as a covert protest against increasing censorship from the Russian Empire.

Karelia Suite, Op. 11
Luonnotar, Op. 70
Swan of Tuonela op. 22 No. 2
Lemminkäinen's Return op. 22 No. 4
Symphony No.3, Op.52
Finlandia, Op. 26


Mia Huhta Soprano
Conductors: Miguel Esteban & George Hlawiczka

Adult £15 and Concessions £11 (on the door)
Advance Adult £11, Concessions 
£9 (10% booking fee applicable)
Book now by visiting:

​
​
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/337394



​Our November concert highlights the first ever realized performance of Kreuz's Viola Concerto, Op. 20 and will be performed in its entirety with a sympathetic re-orchestration created by the Soloist: Victoria Bernath and conducted by Peter Keenan

I Maestri are delighted to be working again with Grammy-nominated Ukrainian-British violist and conductor Maxim Rysanov who has established himself as one of the world’s most vibrant and charismatic musicians of his generations.

Hungarian Cellist Dóra Kokas (born in 1992) has already established herself as one of the leading cellists of her generation, performing regularly as a recitalist, chamber musician and as orchestra soloist.

Prokofiev – ‘Classical’ Symphony No. 1
Kreuz – Viola Concerto, Op. 20
Tchaikovsky – Pezzo Capriccioso, Op. 62
Beethoven Symphony No. 7, Op. 92

Book now by visiting: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/336899









The orchestra of I Maestri begins its 15th season with an Autumn programme of Beethoven and Mendelssohn.

Conductor and conducting mentor John Landor of LMA Orchestra collaborates for the second time with I Maestri with his students for a Masterclass and evening performance on Sunday 27th September 2015.

I Maestri is a unique organisation that helps talented young conductors explore their skills and learning with an orchestra through a programme of workshops, masterclasses and public performances.

Evening programme:
Beethoven Symphony No. 4, Op. 60
Mendelssohn Symphony No. 4, Op. 90 'Italian'

Tickets:
Adult £12 and Concessions £9 (on the door)
Advance Adult £9 and Concessions £7

​






​
​



To celebrate the independence of America and it musical relationship with Europe the orchestra and conductors of I Maestri have selected a melodic themed programme of marriage, ‘Shaker’ dance, refection and fun farmyard sounds hidden within the music of Haydn.

Aaron Copland – Appalachian Spring
Igor Stravinsky – Dumbarton Oaks
Samuel Barber – Adagio for strings
Joseph Haydn Symphony No. 83 (La poule)
I Maestri Orchestra conducted by
Stacey Richard Watton 
Saturday 4th July at 7pm
Bow Church
163 Bow Road, London E3 2SJ
Tickets: Adult £12, Concessions and Members £10 
Advance tickets: Adult £9, Concessions and Members £7

​


​


The Orchestra and Conductors of I Maestri present a Bohemian Summers Evening with an all Dvořák programme of musical delight; full of energetic and jubilant festive sounds, melodic riches of love and beauty, turbulence and drama, just as you would expect from a typical night out!?

Concert Programme:
​
Antonín Dvořák:
Carnival Overture, Op. 92
Cello Concerto in B minor, Op. 104
Symphony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70

Soloists: Thomas Gregory – Cello 
Conductors: Stacey Richard Watton and Rachael Young

Concert begins at 6:30pm


Tickets:
Adult £14, Concessions and Members £10 (on the door)
Advance Adult £10, Concessions and Members £8.00

​





​




Welcome to an exciting program of Czech music. Yes! I dare say also Mahler as he was born in Jihlava in Moravia.
Dvorak's last symphonic poem, The Golden Spinning Wheel is the third of his poems based on Petr Erben's folk tales, which were passed on verbally for 100s years and written down in the 19 century. As in all fairy tales, there are sinister, dark twists, and nowhere more so than here where the Spinning wheel tells of where to find the dismembered body of the young maiden.
Suk was Dvorak's son in law and the Fantasie for violin is a masterpiece of equal story-telling, which needs to be heard much more outside of the Czech lands.
Mahler's Ruckert Lieder are some of his last lieder and extremely beautiful. 
Janacek. another Moravian, was equally one of the geniuses of the 20th century. His music is very original yet his inspiration coming from moravian folk music. He composed almost all his masterpieces around the age of 80 when he fell in love with a young girl and the masterpieces resulting from this late passion gave us extraordinary music. 

Visit: http://www.wegottickets.com/event/314711
​




​


​


​The Orchestra and Conductors of I Maestri warmly present: Where Trails tell Tales; a Young Soloists Concert programme in collaboration with rising new talent from student musicians of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain.
I Maestri strongly dedicate its efforts in aiding the next generation of highly gifted and talented musicians and has worked and helped promote the beginnings of a new musical journey to many now well established artists, such as: Nicola Benedetti, Yuri Zhislin, Maxim Rysanov and many others. It offers a platform for Young Artists to work with an orchestra, for some, the very first time, before they embark on their professional careers and musical path.
This evening's performance begins the 'Trail' of a new 'Tale' for three very special young individuals; Leora Cohen (Violinist), Anna Semple (Violist) and Joseph Pritchard (Cellist). All three perform with the NYO and attend some of the most eminent musical institutions, such as the Royal College of Music and the Yehudi Menuhin School.


​





​
​
​


​
We would like to welcome you to our first masterclass with John Landor. He will work with 3-4 students from 1.30-4.30pm on the Sunday 25th January at the United Reformed Church, Pond Square, N6 6BA. It will centre on Beethoven's 1st Symphony and Mendelssohn's Hebrides overture.
In the concert I have added Dvorak's Romance with Malcolm Allison, our leader, and Sibelius' Pelleas and Melisande, which is a suite of 9 movements.
The program is a lovely set of evocative works. The opening of the Beethoven is a surprise, starting in the wrong key. The work progresses into a bustling finale. 
Dvorak's f minor romance is really a gem in the violin repertory, brooding in nature, but ending in the pastoral mood.
After Mendlssohn's Hebrides overture, which he wrote after a visit to the misty Scottish Island, we conclude with Sibelius' suite Pelleas and Melisande. These are a set of masterpieces. Very simple in Sibelius' typical way when he uses the barest of material (as did Beethoven) but very melodious and atmospheric.
I do hope you can join us for the wonderful music and for drinks afterwards!







​


Join us for some of the most impressive and deepfelt music written. All three works express different spiritual traditions.  
Bruch's Kol Nidrey is a hearthfelt jewish prayer. 
Strauss Also Sprach Zarathustra is based on the zoroastran religion, the Parsee faith and the oldest monotheistic religion. It is inspired by a philosophical novel of the same title by Friedrich Nietsche and the opening was made famous by Stanley Kubrick Films Space Odyssey 2001. 
Mahler's Song of the Earth is in effect his last symphony and is a setting of 6 poems from ancient chinese, translated and published by Hans Bethge. I hope you can come and support us in this truly wonderful music.

Box Office and doors open at 5:30pm
Online booking:
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/297042
Pre booked ticket will not be posted but need to be collected from the box office on the day of the performance.






​

​



The orchestra and conductors of I Maestri presents an evening of enchantment with a program of musical splendor.

To get your emotions flowing the concert begins with an all time favorite; Tchaikovsky's Fantasy Overture to Romeo and Juliet that bursts with immense musical passion.
Following this wonderful epilogue the mood and scene changes to a more cheerful, brighter and charismatic note with an energetic performance of Prokofiev's delightful Classical Symphony.
Finally the fairy tale journey will end with a more solemn tone through the performance of Rachmaninov's majestic, heroic and tragic 1st Symphony. 


Box Office and doors open at 5:30pm
Online booking:
http://www.wegottickets.com/event/296882
Pre booked ticket will not be posted but need to be collected from the box office on the day of the performance.

Picture
Please join us for our last concert this season with the wonderful 
Violin Concerto by Johannes Brahms 
and 
Dvorak's radiant Symphony no 8 in G major.

Jorg Hammann, violinist from the LSO conducts.
George Hlawiczka, our Artistic Director and Concertmaster of the Symphony Orchestra of India on violin.

On Sunday 6th July 2014 at 6.30pm
St. Anne's Church, on 108 Highgate West Hill, N6 6AP 

The church is situated near Parliament Fields and a perfect end to a picknic on Hampstead Heath.

Tickets are £10, free entry for children. 
Available on the door from 6pm.

Vienna Moods

Picture
Our next concert will take place on Sunday 8th September 2013 at 7pm at St. John's, Smith Square, SW1P 3HA http://www.sjss.org.uk

Korngold Violin Concerto
Mahler Symphony no. 6 'Tragic'

George Hlawiczka violin
Anastasios Strikos, Joan Enric Lluna, Luke Cleghorn, Iain Hellen conductors

Tickets  are £20, £12 and £9 concessions 
www.sjss.org.uk 
tel. 0207 222 1061.

We welcome conductors from Vienna, Athens, Spain and South Africa to take part in Mahler's Symphony no. 6 'Tragic', according to Webern and Berg his best symphony.

Artistic Director George Hlawiczka will play the Korngold Violin Concerto, a work composed, or rather completed for Heifetz after another violinist, Bronislaw Huberman found it too demanding technicaly. A beautiful and lush work by a composer that composed many of the loved film scored for the old movies of the golden era. 

I do hope to see you there!

Remebrance Sunday

Picture
Coming up in November!

Remembrance Sunday Concert on Sunday 10th November at 3.30pm at St. John's Smith Square, SW1P 3HA

To include 
Beethoven Fidelio Overture and Funeral March
Elgar Nimrod
Shostakovich Violin Concerto no. 1
Sibelius Symphony no. 7
and hymns with orchestra and audience

George Hlawiczka, violin
John Landor, Patrick Noronha, Gabriel Drossart, conductors

Ticket: £15
in aid of The Lotus Children's Centre Charitable Trust
www.lotuschild.org

Mahler's Birthday Concert

Picture
Our last concert

The concert is supported by the Mahler Societies of Geneva, New York and UK and will celebrate Mahler's Birthday with a performance of his first Symphony in its 1893 Hamburg version, score for a reduced orchestra and includes the original second movement entitled 'Blumine'.

 We will also feature Valeris Pearson's 'Murnau'. Murnau is a mountain vacation spot near Munich and as Mahler's famously composed his later works in the Alp, a fitting compliment.

Mine Dogantan Dack (Turkey) will join us on the piano for Beethoven's Piano Concerto no. 5, 'Emperor'



Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Next events
  • Home
  • The Orchestra
  • The Musicians
    • The Artistic Director
    • The Conductors
    • The Soloists
    • Orchestra members
  • Concerts
    • 2011-2012
    • Past concert seasons
  • Photo Gallery
  • Multimedia
    • Flyers
    • Video
    • Audio
    • Programme notes
  • Blog
  • Contact us