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Clássico na cripta: A Little Night Music com Nikolic & Nikolic

Viena, Igreja de São Pedro — Krypta

Free seating  1 h  E-Ticket instantâneo Dê isto como presente flexível

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Preço Total
$ 34

Sobre o Evento

Neste concerto altamente antecipado, ouça os sons melífluos da música clássica de Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven e Johann Sebastian Bach na preciosa e mundialmente conhecida Peterskirche de Viena.

Michaela & Milan Nikolić oferecem uma abordagem especial à música clássica com a sua interpretação fresca no ambiente íntimo da cripta da Igreja de São Pedro. Conhecidos pela sua afinidade com a música clássica vienense, impressionam com uma expressão precisa que vai do espirituoso ao romântico, cheia de energia e elegância.
KLASSIK in the KRYPTA oferece experiências de concerto extraordinárias. A proximidade com os artistas de renome cria uma fascinante troca de energia que cativa o público e torna o evento cultural numa experiência inesquecível.
A cripta é agradavelmente quente em qualquer altura do ano.

Informações Práticas

The 'Opera in the Crypt' series is a unique form of presenting opera at its very essence. With piano accompaniment, talented singers in costumes perform the works in the exceptional, intimate atmosphere of the crypt under St. Peter's Church. Through the short distance between audience and musicians you can experience opera in a way you have never heard or seen it before.

Programação

  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Eine kleine Nachtmusik G‐Dur, KV 525 f. Violine & Cello (Orig. Streicher‐Serenade Nr. 13)
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Duo I für Violine & Cello in G‐Dur, KV 423
  • Ludwig van Beethoven – Duo I für Violine & Cello in C‐Dur
  • Johann Sebastian Bach – Doppelkonzert für Violine & Cello in D‐Moll, BWV 1043
O programa está sujeito a alterações

Artistas

Violoncelo: Michaela Nikolić
Violino: Milan Nikolić

Peterskirche

The Peterskirche (St Peter’s Church) is the second-oldest church in Vienna, founded around 800AD, if legend is to be believed. The present church was built in 1732 in the Baroque style, with Vienna's first baroque dome. Inspired by St Peter's Basilica in Rome, the interior is adorned with frescoes, sculptures, golden altarpieces and carved wood. Peterskirche is one of Vienna's busiest classical music venues, featuring a diverse program that includes daily organ concerts, operas, choral concerts and performances by prominent local and international artists. In addition to performances in the elegant main sanctuary, the Peterskirche also hosts concerts in the fascinating and intimate crypt below ground level.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Perhaps the most important composer of all time, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was an Austrian composer of the late 18th century. Born in 1756 in Salzburg, he showed prodigious musical talent from childhood. Beginning at five years of age, he composed more than 600 works, including concertos, symphonies, religious works and operas before his premature death at the age of 35. Hi influence over successive generations cannot be overestated - Ludwig van Beethoven wrote of Mozart "posterity will not see such a talent again in 100 years”. Despite the immense success of his compositions, and the acclaim he received across Europe, Mozart achieved little financial security and rwas buried in an unmarked grave in Vienna's St Marx Cemetery.

Ludwig van Beethoven

Ludwig van Beethoven was a German pianist and composer of the late 18th century. He is well known as the most influential composers of all time as well as crucial figure to the Classical music scene. In fact, he demonstrated his musical talent at an early age, taking lessons from his father and composer/conductor Christian Gottlob Neefe. Later, he moved to Vienna where he gained the reputation of a virtuoso pianist by composing his popular masterpieces. He created his most admired works in his last 15 years of life, all the while being almost completely deaf.

Johann Sebastian Bach

The name Bach and the word musician had long been synonyms in Germany as the world saw 56 musicians from this kin. But it was Johann Sebastian Bach, a genius composer and virtuoso organ player, who shed lustre on his family name. He was born on th 31st of March 1685 in Eisenach, a small town in Thuringia. At the age of 10 he became an orphan and was brought up by his elder brother Johann Christoph, who was an organist in a neighbouring town. His brother was the one to teach music to the young Johann Sebastian. Later he moved to Luneburg where he attended a church school and mastered the techniques of playing violin, viola, piano and organ by the age of 17. Besides that, Bach was a choir singer and later after his voice broke he became a chanter’s assistant. In 1703 Bach was hired as a court musician in the chapel of Duke Johann Ernst III. He earned such a good reputation there that he was later invited to Arnstadt to be an organist at the New Church, where he wrote his best organ works. In 1723 he moved to Leipzig to be a chantor at St. Thomas Church where he stayed until his death of a stroke in 1750. In the year of his death he had undergone unsuccessful eye surgery which lead him to lose his eyesight. During that strenuous time his second wife Anna Magdalena helped him to write his last musical pieces. Bach’s artistic legacy is vast. He created compositions in all genres of the time: oratorias, cantatas, masses, motets, music for organ, piano and violin.

Morada

Igreja de São Pedro, Petersplatz, Viena, Austria — Veja no Google Maps

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