A Harp Affair
CHF

About The Programme
He’s both an aesthete and a dignitary, a member of the village council appropriately clad in a red cloak, an unrecognised musical genius and at the same time a victim of physical abuse – and he’s hanging bound and gagged, high up in a tree, looking down forlornly on the rowdy party celebrating the Gauls’ glorious victories over the Romans. It’s the poor bard Cacofonix, who sadly isn’t able to have much of a positive impact when he strikes up on his lyre. But the Gauls in Asterix and Obelix aren’t the only the audience to lose their senses at the sound of a harp. In Gottfried von Strasbourg’s medieval poem Tristan, the eponymous hero manages to bewitch his audience with the intoxicating music of his harp: “Now Tristan began playing them a melody […]. He played so beautifully and plucked the harp so wonderfully […] that many stood there or sat there, forgetting their own names. Their hearts and ears grew numb and dazed and lost their way”. Countless myths, fairy tales and stories tell of the legendary, supernatural impact of plucked, stringed instruments in olden times such as the lyre, the lute and the harp: Gods are appeased, wild animals experience the peace of paradise, people are saved from death, and giants are tamed.
Alexander Boldachev on the harp and Semion Gurevich on violin and viola are also capable of enchanting their audiences with their music – though the Andermatt Concert Hall admittedly offers a more Earth-bound experience than for the harps of legend. In chronological order, these two musicians will play some of the best-known melodies in music history. They demonstrate the versatility of the harp while taking you on a musical journey from the beginnings of Western music to the present day. Their programme begins with a hymn from the 14th century BC that is considered to be the oldest surviving written melody. From Hildegard von Bingen’s medieval O viridissima virga to music by the Renaissance composer Palestrina, this “best-of” programme leads into the Italian and German Baroque of Vivaldi and Bach. Then follows the Classical era, with music by Mozart, and works by the Romantics Schubert and Tchaikovsky, before we come to the music of the 20th century in the shape of Debussy’s “Clair de Lune”, Shostakovich’s catchy, vivacious Waltz No. 2, and a medley from Star Wars. The audience in Andermatt will soon realise why out of all the instruments, it is the harp that succeeds in exerting such a fascination on us.
Lineup
ALEXANDER BOLDACHEV, harp
SEMION GUREVICH, violin and viola
programme
A musical journey from the Middle Ages (Hildegard von Bingen) via the Baroque (Bach), the Classical (Mozart) and the Romantic (Schubert) into our own time (with a Star-Wars medley).
- 18:30Doors open
- 19:30concert (incl. break)
- 21:30Approx. end time
concert hall
Andermatt
How to get there
Details on how to get there can be found on the ANDERMATT MUSIC website.
barrier-free access
The Andermatt concert hall is barrier-free. Wheelchair tickets are available via email at info@andermattmusic.ch or at Andermatt Alpine Apartments at +41 41 888 78 00.
Seating on the balcony is recommended for people with reduced mobility. Chamber music concerts and New Folk Music concerts usually do not have grandstand seating: Here, all seats are accessible without steps.
The Andermatt concert hall has an inductive listening system.
Garderobe
evening ticket office
The box office opens 1 hour before the start of the concert.
Doors open / late entry
Admission to the concert hall is 30 minutes before the start of the concert. Late admission is only possible during applause between plays and on the guidance of the hall staff.
Discount
Discounts are available for children, students and members of the Gotthard MemberClub. Details about the benefits can be found here.
Alexander Boldachev is a virtuoso harpist, composer, teacher, and founder of the Zurich Harp Festival. He received a Master’s degree from the Zurich Academy of Arts, studying with Catherine Michel (harp), Mathias Steinauer (composition) and Marc Kissoczy (conducting). He has won awards at over a dozen international competitions including the “Prix Walo” and the “ProEuropa”.
Alexander Boldachev has performed in the USA, England, Canada, France, Japan, Brazil, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Germany, Switzerland, Turkey, Argentina, Hungary, Italy, Russia and elsewhere, and has been a guest at Carnegie Hall in New York, the Musikverein in Vienna and the Great Philharmonic Hall in St. Petersburg. In 2018, he wrote and performed an electronic harp solo at the FIFA World Cup Opening Ceremony, sharing the stage with Robbie Williams and Aida Garifullina. Boldachev was given the prize for the “Best Rock Cover Song” at the Akademia Music Awards in Los Angeles, for a unique performance of the song “Californication” by the American band Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Semion Gurevich was born in 1990 in St. Petersburg and grew up in a family of musicians. He completed his modern violin studies at St. Petersburg Conservatory and the Hanns Eisler School of Music Berlin. Subsequently, he deepened his knowledge of Baroque violin at the University of the Arts Berlin and at the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis. Semion Gurevich has won numerous competitions, including the David Oistrakh Competition, the Shostakovich Competition, and most recently, the Göttingen Händel Competition and the Biagio Marini Competition in Neuburg, Germany. He received significant artistic inspiration from musicians such as Mstislav Rostropovich, Gidon Kremer, Zakhar Bron, Maxim Vengerov, Tabea Zimmermann, Rachel Podger and Amandine Beyer. He has also led the Synergy Chamber Orchestra in St. Petersburg and successfully performs as a soloist and chamber musician all around Europe.
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