柏林乐团:威廉皇帝纪念教堂的维瓦尔第、巴赫和莫扎特音乐会
柏林, 威廉皇帝纪念教堂 (Kaiser‐Wilhelm‐Gedächtniskirche) — Main Hall
演出简介
在令人惊叹的威廉皇帝纪念教堂,与柏林交响乐团共度一个夜晚,领略欧洲300年古典音乐史上的巅峰杰作。
杜安甘蒙·傅
以其充满力量与表现力的女高音声誉卓著,杜安甘蒙·傅已俘获全球观众的心。这位泰国籍歌唱家在维也纳和柏林深造期间,不断精进其艺术造诣。 2022年,杜安加蒙在维也纳美泉宫剧院以格蕾特尔一角完成歌剧首演,令观众倾倒。她屡获大阪、阿斯塔纳、布鲁塞尔、格拉茨及维也纳等国际赛事大奖,才华备受认可。 2024年,她荣膺柏林爱乐音乐厅新人音乐会绝对冠军殊荣,奠定歌剧界新星地位。
切勿错过杜安阿蒙·傅震撼人心的舞台演绎——她那如天籁般翱翔的歌喉与饱含张力的演绎,必将为您留下永恒记忆。
柳大允 — 小提琴独奏
小提琴家柳大允因荣获2021年慕尼黑ARD国际音乐比赛"特别奖"而享誉国际,同时也是2024年伊丽莎白女王小提琴比赛获奖者,并斩获2023年朗-蒂博小提琴比赛二等奖。 兪大允曾与比利时国家管弦乐团、韩国国家交响乐团等顶尖乐团合作演出。他演奏的1774年乔瓦尼·巴蒂斯塔·瓜达尼尼小提琴,由锦湖文化基金会慷慨出借。
亚历山大·沃尔科夫 — 管风琴
管风琴演奏家亚历山大·沃尔科夫2003年生于格拉佐夫市,以优异成绩毕业于圣彼得堡M.I.格林卡合唱学校,主修管风琴、钢琴、声乐及指挥。2022年他进入柏林艺术大学深造管风琴专业。 虽年少却已斩获多项管风琴赛事奖项,包括2021年萨拉托夫"第二届全俄青年管风琴家比赛"及莫斯科"2021 VIVAT MUSICA"比赛。其精湛技艺与情感丰沛的演绎征服了俄罗斯、斯洛文尼亚、芬兰及德国各大教堂与音乐厅的听众。
柏林管弦乐团
柏林管弦乐团是享誉国际的弦乐合奏团体,汇聚全球顶尖音乐家,以充满张力的演绎和饱含情感的丰沛音色著称。本系列音乐会中,乐团将呈现跨越300年音乐史的经典杰作。
演出曲目
- 约翰·帕赫贝尔 – 卡农 – Canon & Gigue
- George Frideric Händel – Largo aus Xerxes
- 安东尼奥·维瓦尔第 – Frühling & Sommer
- 弗朗茨·舒伯特 – Ave Maria (Op. 52)
- 约翰·塞巴斯蒂安·巴赫 – Toccata und Fuge d‐Moll BWV 565
- 沃尔夫冈·阿玛多伊斯·莫扎特 – Requiem Lacrimosa
- 路德维希·凡·贝多芬 – Symphonie Nr. 5, Allegro con brio
- 沃尔夫冈·阿玛多伊斯·莫扎特 – Salzburg Symphony K. 136 Allegro
- 夏尔-玛丽·维多尔 – Toccata from Symphony No. 5
艺术家
| 乐团: | 柏林交响乐团 由来自世界各地的杰出年轻艺术家组成,这支柏林室内乐团经常在该市著名的凯撒威廉纪念教堂演出。 在教堂宏伟的彩色玻璃窗所营造的独特氛围中,他们演绎从巴赫到贝多芬的经典名作,并与正处于职业生涯初期的优秀独奏家们合作。柏林室内乐团坚信古典音乐具有超越流派界限的力量——他们与德国DJ及电子音乐制作人亚历克斯·克里斯滕森(Alex Christensen)长期合作,共同在德国及世界各地巡演,为乐迷带来精彩演出。 |
|---|---|
| 女高音: | Duangamorn Fu |
| 小提琴家: | Dayoon You |
| Organ player: | Aleksandr Volkov |
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche
The Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church is a Protestant church affiliated with the regional congregation of the German Evangelical church. Located in Berlin on the famous Kurfurstendamm ,the remaining spire of the old church, damaged in World War II is a well-known landmark of West Berlin, nicknamed the 'Hollow Tooth' by Berliners. The current church, and chapel tower, built in the early 1960s, are sometimes called 'the lipstick and the powder compact' for their respective shapes, and are notable for their extensive use of stained glass. The damaged remnants of the 1890s church were not lost, but have been collected into a memorial hall on the ground floor of the church as a reminder of past events.
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.
Franz Schubert
During his rather short life, Franz Schubert, one of the fathers of romanticism in music, had always been an unappreciated genius who had never received public acclaim. Only his family and friends were delighted by his music, and most of his works were discovered and published only many years after his death. Franz Schubert was born on the 31th of March 1797 in the suburbs of Vienna. His father and eldest brother were amateur musicians and they taught him to play piano and violin. At the age of 11 Schubert was a singer in a choir at the Lichtenthal parish and later auditioned for Antonio Salieri and admitted to the emperor’s choir. During that period young Franz started composing his own works. However, after his voice broke he had to leave the choir and in 1814 he started working as a teacher in the same parish school as his father. He never stopped composing and 4 years later he decided to quit teaching and devote his life completely to music. He fell out with his father because of that and struggled to make ends meet. In 1818 Schubert went to Vienna, where he met Vogl. Together they gave private concerts in small aristocratic circles, mainly playing Lieder, which Schubert wrote around 600. Franz Schubert gave only one big public concert in his whole life in March 1828, which was very warmly received by the audience. However, his health was deteriorating and in November the same year he died of thyroid fever at the age of 31.
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.
Georg Friedrich Händel
An English subject with German origins, Georg Handel was truly a musical pioneer, combining musical traditions of English, Italian and German composers. He was born in 1685 in Halle, Germany, into a very religious and conservative family. His father was dreaming for his son to become a lawyer and would not let young Georg play musical instruments at home. But the Duke Johann Adolf accidentally heard him playing in the chapel and convinced Georg's father to let his son receive a musical education. Thus, Handel became a pupil of the famous organ player and composer Friedrich Zachow. The first success came to Handel in 1705 when he moved to Hamburg and staged his two premiere operas, Almira and Nero, in the Oper am Gänsemarkt. Almira immediately became a highlight of the theatre and was performed around 20 times. Later next year Handel moved to Italy were he received high acclaim and was put on the same level as renowned Italian composers of the time. In 1710 Handel travelled to London where later he decided to settle down. There he wrote a sacred choral piece "Te Deum" that was played in St. Paul´s Cathedral at the ceremony devoted to signing the Utrecht Treaty. From that moment onwards he became the leading composer of England, as the country did not have any native prominent composers. His oeuvre was mainly focused on operas, but by 1730 the genre of Italian opera ceased to be popular and Handel´s success dwindled. During the last years of his life until his death in 1759 he was mainly composing oratorias, including his famous and magnificent Messiah.
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.
Antonio Vivaldi
Antonio Vivaldi went down in history as a creator of the instrumental concert genre and the father of orchestral music. He was born in Venice on the 4th of March 1678. Vivaldi was a weak and sickly child suffering from asthma, however could not stop him from devoting himself completely to music. His father, Giovanni Batista a professional violinist, taught his elder son Antonio to play the violin. With his father young Antonio met the best musicians of Venice of that time and gave concerts in local churches. He also worked as a violin teacher and later as a music director at the orphanage Ospedalle della Pieta. Meanwhile he composed concertos, sacred works and vocal music and in 1713 he achieved great recognition with his sacred choral music. Vivaldi got captivated by the world of opera and worked both as opera composer and impresario at the Teatro San Angelo. In 1717 he obtained a prestigious position by the prince court in Manua as a director of secular music and worked there until around 1720. During that time he composed his world-renowned masterpiece The Four Seasons. In the 1730's his career dwindled as his music became unfashionable and the great composer died in poverty. It took the world two centuries to rediscover and reevaluate Vivaldi’s music, as it was buried into oblivion after his death. In the early 20th century many previously unknown works were found and immediately captured the hearts of the music lovers.
地址
威廉皇帝纪念教堂 (Kaiser‐Wilhelm‐Gedächtniskirche), Breitscheidtplatz, 柏林, 德国 — 查看谷歌地图