Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 


World-class cellist begins first tour of 2013 NZSO Season

5 March 2013

World-class cellist begins the first national tour of the 2013 NZSO Season

Virtuosic cellist Daniel Müller-Schott visits New Zealand for the first time to perform one of the world’s best loved cello concertos with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra.

The accomplished German, who will visit Dunedin, Christchurch, Napier, Hamilton, Auckland and Wellington, has been described in the New York Times as “a fearless player with technique to burn”. His performances of Dvořák’s glorious Cello Concerto have established his reputation as one of the most exciting talents of his generation.

“What brings great joy for me in this Concerto is when you can hear the orchestra in its full symphonic glory and force and the cello is still able to communicate and answer to what the orchestra is telling,” says Daniel Müller-Schott. “This is a great challenge but also a most satisfying and tremendous pleasure.”

Dvořák’s Cello Concerto was composed in New York, during a period when Dvořák’s sister-in-law Josefina Kaunitzová, a woman Dvořák had long admired from afar, became seriously ill. It is a powerful study of longing and loss.

Homesick, Dvořák returned to Bohemia in 1895 following three years in New York City as the director of the National Conservatory of Music. Soon after his return, Josefina Kaunitzová died. In 1896, he visited London for the last time to conduct the premiere of his Cello Concerto.

The raw emotions echoed in this great work are offset by the rhythmic vivaciousness of Russian composer Rachmaninov’s final work, Symphonic Dances, which was also composed in New York City.

Originally intended as a ballet, Symphonic Dances allowed Rachmaninov to indulge in nostalgia for the Russia he had known. It includes musical quotations from his other works, including the opening theme of his First Symphony, and showcases, for the only time in one of his works, the alto saxophone as a solo instrument.

New Zealand composer Larry Pruden opens the concert with his 1952 work, Soliloquy for Strings, which was composed when he was studying at the Guildhall School of Music in London.

The melody exposed in the opening bars is plaintive, expressing a sense of sadness, and the concentrated string writing continues this tone throughout the work. Three years after its completion, Pruden settled in Wellington where he continued to tutor, conduct, and compose until his death in 1982.

All three of the works programmed in Echoes of Home were written when the composer was far from home, so it is only fitting that our Finnish Music Director, Pietari Inkinen, conducts this Audi Concert series.

His return to New Zealand follows the premiere of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring Des Nibelungen at the elegant Teatro Massimo in Palermo, Italy. For the first time in its history, the Teatro Massimo is staging a new production of Wagner’s masterpiece entirely within the same season, in the celebratory bicentennial year of the birth of Wagner. Maestro Inkinen will be fresh from his Palermo premiere of The Rhine Gold and, most recently, The Valkyrie, which follows his successful premiere of the NZSO’s production of this magnificent work last July.

“I’m looking forward to being back in New Zealand to tour the country with this expressive programme,” says Maestro Inkinen.

“The various timbres and colours of the strings are accentuated in this programme and the full Orchestra opens out in Rachmaninov’s Symphonic Dances so it’s an opportunity to show off the NZSO’s luscious string sound. Cellist Daniel Müller-Schott has a very good reputation internationally so I am thrilled to be working with him for the first time and hear him play Dvořák’s moving cello lines, pitted against the full Orchestra.”

“The magnetic young German cellist Daniel Müller-Schott administered a dose of adrenaline ... a fearless player with technique to burn ... But even more impressive were his gorgeous, plush tone and his meticulous attention to expression.“ The New York Times.

The NZSO looks forward to seeing you at Echoes of Home, the Audi Concerts.

NZSO Echoes of Home
The Audi Concerts

PIETARI INKINEN Conductor
DANIEL MÜLLER-SCHOTT Cello

LARRY PRUDEN Soliloquy for strings
ANTONIN DVOŘÁK Cello Concerto
SERGEI RACHMANINOV Symphonic Dances

DUNEDIN / Regent Theatre / Friday 5 April / 6:30 pm
TICKETDIRECT / 0800 224 224 / TICKETDIRECT.CO.NZ

CHRISTCHURCH / CBS Canterbury Arena / Saturday 6 April / 7:00 pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 / TICKETEK.CO.NZ

NAPIER / Municipal Theatre / Tuesday 9 April / 7:30 pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 / TICKETEK.CO.NZ

HAMILTON / Founders Theatre / Thursday 11 April / 7:30 pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 / TICKETEK.CO.NZ

AUCKLAND / Town Hall / Friday 12 April / 7.00 pm
THE EDGE / 0800 289 842 / BUYTICKETS.CO.NZ

WELLINGTON / Michael Fowler Centre / Saturday 13 April / 7:30 pm
TICKETEK / 0800 842 538 / TICKETEK.CO.NZ

www.nzso.co.nz

ENDS

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 

Snow Business: Snow Guns Crank Into Action

The start of snowmaking today at Mt Hutt in Methven and early this morning at Coronet Peak in Queenstown signals the impending opening of two of New Zealand’s most popular ski fields. More>>

NZ International Comedy Festival: Winners Have The Last Laugh!

Rose Matafeo and Jarred Christmas have capped off an incredible 2013 NZ International Comedy Festival by picking up the country’s most prestigious comedy awards; the Billy T Award and The FRED Award at last night’s Last Laughs hosted by the bro-mantic duo of Ben Hurley and Steve Wrigley. More>>

Pink Shirt Day: Bullying - Where's The Power?

People in schools and workplaces will think they’re seeing through rose-coloured glasses on May 17 as New Zealanders join together to show solidarity and raise awareness around bullying by wearing pink and celebrating Pink Shirt Day. More>>

ALSO:

Triennial: NZ's Biggest Contemporary Visual Arts Festival Opens

On 10 May Auckland’s art scene bursts to life for the opening of the 5th Auckland Triennial, New Zealand’s largest contemporary visual art festival. More>>

Werewolf: Les Blank - The Quiet American

Gordon Campbell: His unblinking quietness could be intimidating, yet it made him usefully invisible. It was sometimes hard to tell if Blank’s subjects consciously developed a tremendous amount of trust in him, or whether they simply forgot he was there. More>>

ALSO:

Sounds: New Zealand Music Month 2013

It's the first day of May – that means NZ Music Month 2013 begins. Thirty-one days of music across our clubs, libraries, airwaves, screens of all sizes, schools, parks, and theaters starts today. More>>

ALSO:

Comedy Festival: All-Star Gorilla

In All-Star Gorilla a motley crew of WIT's seasoned veterans (and the occasional piece of up-and-coming cannon fodder) will take turns directing improvised scenes, stories, sagas or songs – silly or serious – in a bid to win audience approval (and bananas). More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
 
Culture
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news