Iveta Apkalna, organ

Saint-Saëns: Danse macabre / Bach: Chaconne & works by Petr Eben, César Franck and Julius Reubke

This concert has already taken place! 13 | 16 | 28 | 41 | 48
This concert has already taken place! 13 | 16 | 28 | 41 | 48
Iveta Apkalna
Iveta Apkalna © Aiga Redmane
  • Doors open 18:30

  • Pre-concert talk 19:00

  • Start 20:00

  • Interval

  • End ca. 21:55

Resonant home game

Iveta Apkalna pursues milestones in organ music: Johann Sebastian Bach’s enormous Chaconne, César Franck’s ground-breaking »Prélude, fugue et variation« or Camille Saint-Saëns’ »Danse macabre« which exploits the symphonic sound possibilities of the organ. The titular organist of the Elbphilharmonie complements her solo programme with further pieces, which also showcase »her« instrument in full splendour.

Johann Sebastian Bach’s Chaconne was originally composed for violin. The contrapuntal entanglements which Bach created within it have, however, inspired several composers to arrange this work for organ. Also, the »Danse Macabre« by Camille Saint-Saëns, originally composed for voice and piano, only became famous in its orchestral version and sounds just as very wonderfully eerie on the organ. César Franck dedicated his »Prélude, fugue et variation« to his friend and organ colleague Saint-Saëns; the three movements seem very different and yet hang together thematically.

As one of the forefathers of organ symphony, Franck is at the inception of a development which had far-reaching consequences for organ building and organ music: to this day (and so also at the Elbphilharmonie), the thousand organ pipes of one instrument should ideally cover the full range of symphonic sound. Iveta Akpalna, who, as the titular organist, knows the Elbphilharmonie organ like hardly anyone else, can exploit the entire colourful richness of the instrument to perfectly set the scene for each piece of her programme.

Performers

Iveta Apkalna organ

Programme

Camille Saint-Saëns
Danse macabre, Op. 40 / adaptation for organ by Edwin Henry Lemare

Johann Sebastian Bach
Chaconne aus: Partita Nr. 2 d-Moll BWV 1004 / from: Partita No. 2 in D minor, BWV 1004 (adaptation for organ by Matthias Keller)

Petr Eben
Requiem and Walpurgisnacht / from: Faust

– Interval –

César Franck
Prélude, fugue et variation in B minor, Op. 18 / from: Six Pièces d’Orgue

Julius Reubke
Sonata in C minor, »Der 94. Psalm«


Encore:

Johann Sebastian Bach
Schafe können sicher weiden / Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd! BWV 208

Pre-Concert Talk

with Thomas Cornelius (in German)

19:00 / Elbphilharmonie, Großer Saal

Supporting programme

Wed, 21 May 2025 19:00
Insight Organ with Thomas Cornelius, Brakula

Series

The Elbphilharmonie Organ

Festival

Hamburg International Music Festival

Promoter: HamburgMusik

Supported by Stiftung Elbphilharmonie

From the Mediatheque : Videos, Podcasts, Articles

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During your visit

Elbphilharmonie Plaza

A public viewing platform on the 8th floor of the Elbphilharmonie

More about the Plaza

Food and Drink

Before the concert and in the interval

Find out more

Coughing, clapping, chatting

Tips for your concert visit

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