Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto - Schedule, Program & Tickets

Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto

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29.02.2020 , Saturday

19:00 

B

Den Norske opera & ballett, Kirsten Flagstads Plass 1, 0150 Oslo, Norway

Few opening chords are as well known as those in Tchaikovsky’s powerful first piano concerto. With the help of swelling orchestra sounds and brilliant piano playing, we are taken on a journey into the Russian woods and ballrooms before the beautiful melodies conclude with a breakneck finale.

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (Orkester - Kategorie 1.)
€57.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (Parkett - Kategorie 1.)
€57.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (Parkett - Kategorie 2.)
€51.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (1. Balkong - Kategorie 1.)
€57.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (1. Balkong - Kategorie 2.)
€51.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (2. Balkong - Kategorie 1.)
€51.00

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Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto (3. Balkong - Kategorie 1.)
€45.00

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For a breakdown of the total price see Price class B
Few opening chords are as well known as those in Tchaikovsky’s powerful first piano concerto. With the help of swelling orchestra sounds and brilliant piano playing, we are taken on a journey into the Russian woods and ballrooms before the beautiful melodies conclude with a breakneck finale. It has been said that this piano concerto is among the most technically difficult ever written. Pianist Christian Grøvlen is taking on this challenge. He is considered one of Norway’s most promising pianists and is debuting with this piece as a soloist with the Norwegian National Opera Orchestra.

Instruments as soloists
The entire orchestra gets to shine in Béla Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra. In a performance filled with merriment, all instruments in the orchestra get to play a soloist role. This concerto from 1943 is a musical milestone that was created in the U.S. after Bartók fled from Nazi-ravaged Europe. The Hungarian national soul is never far off and the composer combines the classical with elements of folk music, wonderfully combined with unique sounds and scale varieties.

Midsummer celebration at Bloksberg
The concert starts with music by another Russian. Modest Mussorgsky’s symphonic A Night on Bald Mountain was inspired by a Russian legend about the witches’ midsummer celebration on the Bloksberg mountain. We hear the witches dance and brooms as they swish through the air – before the chiming of the church bells break the spell.

The conductor is Croatian Ivan Repušić, currently music director of the Münchner Rundfunkorchester and 1. guest conductor at the Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Program
Modest Mussorgsky:
A Night on Bald Mountain

Pjotr Tchaikovsky:
Piano Concerto No. 1 in B Minor, Opu. 23

Béla Bartók:
Concerto for Orchestra

Subject to change.