The OSR invites the LSO conducted by Michael Sanderling and accompanied by Hélène Grimaud on piano
The OSR invites the LSO conducted by Michael Sanderling and accompanied by Hélène Grimaud on piano
Luzerner Sinfonieorchester
Michael Sanderling conductor
Hélène Grimaud piano
Franz Liszt
Mephisto Waltzes No. 1, S. 110/2
Maurice Ravel
Concerto for piano and orchestra in G major
Intermission
Piotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky
Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 3
With its procession of love, the supernatural and the pact with the devil, the old myth of Faust, revived in Germany by Goethe and Lenau, had what it took to seduce the Romantics. Liszt seized on it several times, notably in this Mephisto-Valse in which the devil takes his violin to carry Faust away in a frenzied dance.
A curious mixture of Basque elements mixed with jazz, serene classicism and disheveled music, Ravel’s Concerto in G major won the support of pianists and the fervour of the public from its creation without ever experiencing an eclipse. Tchaikovsky speaks in the first person in his Symphony No. 4 in F minor which expresses his doubts, his unhappiness and his revolt better than literature could since music expresses itself beyond words. It is a tormented work evoking the irrevocable part of destiny that awaits every human being, this fatum so omnipresent in the Russian soul.
Approximately 1h45 including a 20-minute intermission
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, rue Bovy-Lysberg 2, 1204 Geneva