The soprano Anna Prohaska is held in high esteem, not only for her great voice, but also for her innovative programme selections. Equally, at home in the music of the Baroque era as in contemporary music, she loves contrasting styles and compositions from different centuries. For the Musikfest Berlin, she is joined by cellist Nicolas Altstaedt and harpsichordist Francesco Corti. They developed a programme that explores themes of linguistic confusion, loneliness, despair, and death: Franz Tunder, main organist at Lübeck’s main church, the Marienkirche, has insightfully set to music the psalm song “An Wasserflüssen Babylon”, whose text recalls the painful experiences of the people of Israel during the Babylonian exile. In his oratorio “Saul”, Georg Friedrich Händel depicts the dramatic conflict between David and Saul and gives voice to the biblically transmitted “Witch of Endor”. Wolfgang Rihm’s latest composition “Gebet der Hexe von Endor”, which will be premiered in this concert, is set in the same context. Also featured are two songs by the English composer John Tavener on verses by the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova, whose late work was strongly influenced by the horrors of the Stalin era, as well as expressive instrumental works for violoncello and harpsichord. The concert concludes with another world premiere: “Sister Death” by Jörg Widmann, a scene from the opera “Babylon”, which explores the limitations and the confusion of language.
Anna Prohaska, Sopran
Nicolas Altstaedt, Violoncello
Francesco Corti, Orgel,Cembalo
Die Sopranistin Prohaska, der Cellist Altstaedt und der Cembalist Corti haben ein Jahrhunderte übergreifendes Programm zusammengestellt. Meilensteine und Entdeckungen der Barockmusik werden von Werken des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts beantwortet.
http://www.berlinerfestspiele.de/musikfest