Cover des Programmheftes
Programme brochure

for the concert

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Programme

Joseph de Boismortier
›Elegie in memoriam Stanislav Liudkevych‹

Sergei Rachmaninoff
Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor

Antonín Dvořák
Symphony No. 8 in G major

Artists

Oksana Lyniv Conductor

  • Mao Fujita Piano

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin

Remaining tickets for this event are available at the box office. In addition, Nikolai Lugansky is unable to play the concerto for scheduling reasons and will return to the DSO next season instead. We are very pleased that Mao Fujita will take over the solo part in Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3.

About the concert

Hardly any other conductor has had such a brilliant career in recent years as the Ukrainian Oksana Lyniv, who is now also introducing herself to the DSO and its audience with this programme. Lyniv makes regular guest appearances on renowned stages in Barcelona, Berlin, Munich, Stuttgart and Vienna, was principal conductor of the Graz Opera between 2017 and 2020 and celebrated an unusually successful debut at the Bayreuth Festival in 2021 with Wagner’s ‘Flying Dutchman’. In Berlin, she conducts two major works from the late Romantic repertoire.

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As distinctive as Antonín Dvořák’s musical language is, he was open to a wide variety of influences throughout his artistic career, including the music of Brahms, Liszt and Wagner. Researchers believe that the artist’s friendship with Pyotr Tchaikovsky left its mark on the Eighth Symphony. In any case, Dvořák’s mentor Brahms was irritated by the free formal progressions of the work, which premiered in Prague in February 1890 and in which he felt the musical “essentials” were missing. Indeed, the immensely engaging Eighth, conceived with relaxed sovereignty, reveals a newfound freedom of expression: It leads from pastoral and folkloric passages in the first movement to the scherzo, characterised by an inexorable dance-like momentum, to the captivatingly musical finale, which opens with a festive trumpet fanfare and consists of a series of variations.

About twenty years later, Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Third Piano Concerto was composed for a major tour in the USA, and he interpreted the solo part of it in one of the first performances under the direction of Gustav Mahler in New York in 1910. The opening theme, which moves in the small intervals so typical of Rachmaninoff, can be considered one of the composer’s signature melodies. His intimate and introverted air gives way to an almost breath-taking virtuosity as the piece progresses. 

Cover des Programmheftes
Programme brochure

for the concert

Download PDF

Artists

Oksana Lyniv

Oksana Lyniv

Conductor

Mao Fujita

Mao Fujita

Piano

Biography
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin

Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin

Orchestra

Biography