Tell, Swiss Legend
CHF
90 / 80 / 70 / 55 / 40

About The Programme
William Tell is the hero of Switzerland’s founding myth and has inspired artists to magnificent works. But it’s somehow typical of the Swiss – and quite in keeping with our sense of understatement – that the story of our great national hero only became famous across the world thanks to works of art created in our neighbouring countries. In the late 18th century, against the backdrop of the French Revolution, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe visited Switzerland several times – repeatedly coming as far as the Gotthard and Andermatt – and all the while engaged in an intensive study of the legend of William Tell. He considered adapting the story himself, but instead passed on the idea to his friend and fellow German Friedrich Schiller, whose drama Wilhelm Tell was given its first performance at the Weimar Court Theatre in 1804, directed by Goethe. This play quickly became popular and also found an admirer in the grandmaster and top tunesmith of Italian opera, Gioachino Rossini. In the late 1820s, when he was in Paris and at the height of his fame, Rossini created his own, operatic monument in music to William Tell.
The Swiss Orchestra is now dedicating a programme of its own to this legendary figure from Swiss history: «Tell, Swiss Legend», which opens with the famous overture from Rossini’s Guillaume Tell. With Hans Huber’s Symphony No. 1 (the Tell Symphony), the Swiss Orchestra, conducted by Lena-Lisa Wüstendörfer, is also presenting a rarely performed Swiss symphonic work that tells the story of our national hero from a Swiss perspective. The structure and sound of the work suggest an underlying dramatic programme in which Tell’s story is transformed into music: Exciting forte passages redolent of danger are followed by idyllic images of Nature and heroic soundscapes. In the final movement, a hymn to Tell and to Swiss independence seems to resound. And perhaps, here and there, we can even hear the bolt of a crossbow whizzing through the air …
Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto will be performed in between these two Tell pieces. Powerful and majestic, while also full of yearning, it remains one of the most popular works in the classical repertoire today. The soloist will be the brilliant pianist Olga Scheps.
Lineup
SWISS ORCHESTRA
LENA-LISA Wüstendörfer, conductor
OLGA SCHEPS, piano
programme
GIOACHINO ROSSINI (1792–1868)
Overture to «William Tell»
PJOTR ILJITSCH TSCHAIKOWSKI (1840–1893)
Piano Concerto No. 1 in b-flat minor, op. 23
HANS HUBER (1852–1921)
Symphony No. 1 in d minor, op. 63 («Tell Symphony«)
- 18:30Doors open
- 19:30Start of concert
- 21:30Approx. end time
Tonhalle
St. Gallen
How to get there
BY PUBLIC TRANSPORT
About 15 minutes by foot from St.Gallen main station
Bus lines 1, 2, 7 and 8 to Theater
BY CAR
Brühltor underground car park
barrier-free access
MOBILITY DISABILITY / WHEELCHAIR
The Tonhalle can be reached via Cityparking Brühltor. Before events, the direct passage to the Tonhalle is open in the first basement. From the basement of Tonhalle, an elevator takes you to the ground floor (foyer / cash desk) and to the hall (first floor), where wheelchair spaces are available on the parquet floor. You can also access the Tonhalle via an outdoor ramp via the Concerto restaurant.
VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
For people with visual impairment or blindness, we offer a free accompanying service by appointment. Assistance dogs are very welcome and can of course be included in the presentation by appointment.
Garderobe
evening ticket office
Doors open / late entry
Discount
Olga Scheps, daughter of Ukrainian pianists, born in Russia and living in her adopted home of Germany since 1992, represents great sound culture, intense expressiveness and a gift for storytelling. She discovered the piano at the age of 4 and was encouraged early on by piano greats such as Alfred Brendel. Renowned conductors such as Thomas Dausgaard, Lorin Maazel, José Serebrier, Marcus Bosch, Tugan Sokhiev, Simone Young, Markus Poschner and Pablo Heras-Casado invited Olga Scheps to collaborate with renowned orchestras such as the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte-Carlo, the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the Russian State Orchestra Moscow, the Staatskapelle Weimar, the Zurich Chamber Orchestra, the Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse and the Prague Philharmonia.
Olga Scheps has performed to great acclaim in world-famous concert halls such as the Philharmonie Berlin, Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, Cologne Philharmonie, Alte Oper Frankfurt, Tonhalle Zurich, Tonhalle Düsseldorf, Cadogan Hall London, Suntory Hall Tokyo and the Vienna Konzerthaus. She is a sought-after guest at renowned festivals in Germany and Switzerland and loves to play in chamber music ensembles. She is an exclusive Sony Classical artist. Her debut album Chopin won an ECHO Klassik award in 2009. This was followed by the recordings Russian Album (2010), Schubert (2012), Vocalise (2015) and a recording of Chopin’s Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 2 with the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra. In 2021, she released Family. This album combines famous classical works with new piano arrangements of well-known melodies and soundtracks, as well as previously unreleased compositions by Schiller (Christopher von Deylen), Chilly Gonzales and Olga Scheps herself. She is an official Steinway Artist since 2013.
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