Junge Deutsche Philharmonie / Stefan Dohr / Jonathan Nott
Borboudakis / Schumann / Ligeti / Dvořák
Romanticism meets modernism
»Stefan Dohr may well be the king of his instrument,« writes the American cultural magazine »The New Criterion«. You can now witness this for yourself at the Elbphilharmonie, when the horn player of the Berlin Philharmonic’s horn player, performs – very appropriately – György Ligeti’s »Hamburg Concerto«, together with the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie. Under the direction of Jonathan Nott, Dohr and the orchestra, which is made up of students from German-speaking music academies, venture into a work that breaks away from the tempered tuning that has prevailed ever since Bach and begins to play around with brand new sounds. In contrast to this, Robert Schumann’s concert work for four horns and a large orchestra can, harmonically speaking, be firmly placed in the Romantic tradition.
Another exciting work on the programme is by Minas Borboudakis. »Z Metamorphosis« is a contemporary symphonic work that the Greek composer wrote based on the material in his opera »Z« and which had its world premiere only last year. The concert comes to a fulminant end with the poetic, lyrical moments of Antonín Dvořák’s »Symphony No. 8«.
Performers
Junge Deutsche Philharmonie
Stefan Dohr french horn
Andreas Becker french horn
Florian Gamberger french horn
Daniel Schimmer french horn
conductor Jonathan Nott
Programme
György Ligeti
Hamburgisches Konzert für Horn und Kammerorchester
Antonín Dvořák
Sinfonie Nr. 8 G-Dur op. 88
– Interval –
Minas Borboudakis
Z Metamorphosis für Orchester
Robert Schumann
Konzertstück für vier Hörner und großes Orchester F-Dur op. 86
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