}
Mon
11.11.24 7:30 pm
Uhr
Rosenheim
Cultural and Congress Center

Divine Swiss Classics

alle konzerte
Tour #
10

About The Programme

There’s no doubt about it: music is made up of notes. And the most common of all notes, arguably the most banal, is at the heart of this concert programme: C, the central key on every keyboard and the natural limit of our tonal scale (C2–c5). C major is often perceived as being the key of serenity, clarity, lightness and universality, and we associate it with joy, happiness and optimism. It’s hardly surprising that Mozart’s most popular, best-known symphony in C major was subsequently nicknamed the “Jupiter” on account of its majestic aura and the splendour of its music, but also because this symphony was his ultimate work in the genre. Music historians have long declared it to be the crowning finale of Mozart’s series of symphonies, and attribute it with divine perfection. And this work is truly radiant and flooded with light.

Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 also ends in a serene C major, though the predominant key of this work is actually c minor, which we often associate with serious, sombre moods. This lends the music an atmosphere of grief, pensiveness and dramatic intensity that nevertheless radiates power and strength. Beethoven’s choice of this key – which stands in such obvious contrast to the radiance of C major – might well have been influenced by Mozart, whose Piano Concerto K. 491, which Beethoven greatly admired, is also in c minor.

Helena Winkelman feels inspired by the idea that trees can communicate with each other. So in Tree Talk, she has created a work that endeavours to capture in music the relationship between trees and the Nature that surrounds them. Just as a tree is exposed to the passing of the seasons, Winkelman’s piece plays with overtones to demonstrate shifts in tone colours and movement. The solo cellos play their open strings and fan out into their harmonic space, as it were: We cannot determine any basic key, just the constant shifting of the sound. In contrast, the Overture to Konrad Adolf Dyhrn’s tragedy Konradin by the composer Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich once more focuses on c minor. When heard in combination with the other works on the programme here, the diversity and expressiveness of this music become all the clearer. Starting off with the basic note of C, musical spaces unfold that are able to trigger all manner of emotions, from melancholy sadness to radiant happiness.

Lineup

TEO GHEORGHIU, piano
SWISS ORCHESTRA
LENA-LISA WÜSTENDÖRFER,
conductor

programme

FRIEDRICH THEODOR FRÖHLICH (1803 BRUGG – 1836 AARAU)
Overture to Dyhrn’s «Konradin»

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN (1770–1827)
Concerto for piano No. 3 in c minor, op. 37

HELENA WINKELMAN (* 1974 SCHAFFHAUSEN)
«Tree Talk» for 2 cellos and string orchestra

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756–1791)
«Jupiter Symphony» No. 41 in C major, K. 551

Venue

Cultural and Congress Center

Rosenheim

How to get there

BY PUBLIC TRANSPORT
About 7 minutes on foot from Rosenheim train station
Bus stop on Salinstrasse next to KU'KO

BY CAR
Car park P1 Hammerweg 1
Pakrhaus P2 Kufsteinstraße 4 with access to the CULTURE+CONGRESS CENTER

barrier-free access

PARKING SPACE FOR PEOPLE WITH REDUCED MOBILITY
We offer wheelchair users the best possible marked parking spaces in our parking garage P2 in the underground car park under the KU'KO.

WHEELCHAIR
All rooms accessible to wheelchair users have easily navigable floors. All event rooms, foyers, toilets, restaurants and cloakrooms are on one level. The visitors' cloakroom is in the KU'KO foyer. Access is barrier-free. The main entrances to the rooms of the Kultur+Kongress Center are stepless. There are toilets suitable for the disabled.
The ticket counter is NOT barrier-free. Height: approx. 120 cm. All wheelchair users and accompanying persons have specially assigned seats.  >> Seating plan <<.

HEARING IMPAIRMENT
An installed radio listening system enables the hard of hearing to improve acoustics in all seats by means of receivers. You can borrow headphones or induction loops free of charge from the cloakroom. A technician will be happy to explain how to use it.

VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
Guide dogs for the blind are allowed

Garderobe

Our supervised cloakroom in the foyer is available for all events. Flat rate per piece of clothing: 2.00€ for concerts and conferences, 1.00€ for children's events and 2.50€ for balls. Flat rate per umbrella: 0.50€.

evening ticket office

The box office is open one hour before the start of the event.

Doors open / late entry

KU'KO is usually open one hour before the start of the event. There are, however, a few exceptions. Please check with our ticket sales department before you visit.

Discount

Teo Gheorghiu, piano

Teo Gheorghiu is very popular in Switzerland and in recent years has also established an international reputation. Piano News magazine recently described him as a “fabulous, mature, intelligent pianist”. Gheorghiu made his debut in the Zurich Tonhalle at the age of 12, playing Schumann’s Piano Concerto. Since then, he has cultivated a versatile repertoire and has performed with orchestras such as the Royal Philharmonic, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Orquestra Sinfonica de Bilbao, the Danish National Symphony, the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra of Moscow and the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra. He regularly collaborates with the Zurich Chamber Orchestra and the Musikkollegium Winterthur. His solo recitals have taken him to all the main Swiss cities and also to London (the Wigmore Hall), Hamburg (the Elbphilharmonie), Tokyo (Suntory Hall), Milan (Societa del Quartetto) and Santiago, as well as to the Beethoven Festival in Bonn, the Dvořák Festival in Prague, to the Louvre and to festivals in Bucharest, Gstaad, Verbier, Lucerne and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

In 2020, the CD label Claves began a long-term collaboration with Teo Gheorghiu. Their first CD was entitled Duende and featured works by Enrique Granados, Isaac Albéniz, Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel and Manuel de Falla. It was acclaimed enthusiastically by the public and press alike and was honoured with the Diapason d’Or. His latest album, Roots, was inspired by a cycle tour that he undertook from his home town in the Zurich Oberland to the country of his ancestors, Romania.

Teo Gheorghiu was born in 1992. He won first prize at the San Marino International Piano Competition in 2004 and first prize at the International Franz Liszt Piano Competition in Weimar the following year. In 2010, he was awarded the Beethoven Ring by the Beethoven Festival in Bonn.

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