Stiftung Mozarteum 30 May 2020 - Arienkonzert - École classique | GoComGo.com

Arienkonzert - École classique

Stiftung Mozarteum, Salzburg, Austria
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3 PM
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Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Salzburg, Austria
Starts at: 15:00
Duration:

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Festival

Salzburg Festival Whitsun 2020

Salzburg Festival during the Holy Trinity 2020. The Salzburg Whitsun Festival has been a highlight of the Salzburg event calendar since 1973. Experience this festival in early summer as a brilliant complement to the Summer Festival!

Programme
Arienkonzert - École classique
Overview

A tribute to Pauline Viardot with arias and orchestral works by Gioachino Rossini, Giacomo Meyerbeer, Charles Gounod and George Frideric  Handel (in arrangements by Hector Berlioz and Charles Gounod)

Opera productions in the 19th century did not focus exclusively on Romantic subjects. The rediscovery of Gluck’s operas by Berlioz, for example, reflects a tendency to fall back on classical and mythological themes as well. Berlioz, Meyerbeer and Gounod were among the 19th-century operatic composers who did most to promote these neoclassical trends.

But there is no doubt that it was Pauline Viardot who played the most significant role in cultivating the 18th-century operatic legacy. Her interpretation of Gluck’s Orpheus was legendary, but she also championed the music of Handel, a composer whose operas were largely neglected in her day. The Handel aria that she probably sang most often was ‘Lascia ch’io pianga’ from Rinaldo. ‘I wouldn’t like to die before hearing you sing “Lascia ch’io pianga” once more for me’, George Sand wrote to her in December 1847. Viardot had first included this aria in the programme of her first recital tour in 1838 and it became a regular part of her concert repertoire, including a version orchestrated by Meyerbeer. And in around 1850 Gounod produced an orchestral version of ‘Verdi prati’ from Alcina that arguably showed off Viardot’s rich-toned mezzo-soprano voice to its greatest advantage.

Venue Info

Stiftung Mozarteum - Salzburg
Location   Schwarzstraße 26

In 1856, the 100th anniversary of Mozart’s birth, an association was founded with the aim of setting up a music school, with a library, archives and concert hall, devoted to Mozart.

Various buildings in the inner city area of Salzburg were considered and eventually it was decided to buy the villa of the former interior minister, Josef von Lasser, in the Schwarzstrasse. Conversion work took place from 1910 to 1914 according to plans drawn up by Richard Berndl. The overriding style is late historicism characteristic of Munich, and elegant details were combined with elements of the local Baroque tradition, art nouveau and patriotic building art. In 1917 the board of governors of the International Mozarteum Foundation elected Bernhard Paumgartner unanimously as director of what was at that time a conservatory. This later became an academy and then the Mozarteum Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, and in the meantime it has achieved university status. During the period when Paumgartner was director, this educational institute experienced a great boom: in particular several music-theatre productions took place in connection with the “Mozarteum Opera Series” and it was thanks to his initiative that these performances took place in the Salzburg City Theatre (now the Landestheater).

Financial problems of the International Mozarteum Foundation were offset by nationalising the teaching part of the foundation’s work in 1922 with the result that nowadays two completely separate corporate bodies exist. The Mozarteum University has in the meantime moved most of its departments into its own building on the Mirabellplatz.

The International Mozarteum Foundation has cooperated closely with the Salzburg Festival ever since 1921: the Great Hall of the Mozarteum is one of the main venues of the concert series especially because it is excellent for the performance of chamber music. The Mozart Matinees, morning concerts given at the weekends during the Salzburg Festival, were introduced by Bernhard Paumgartner and have in the meantime assumed legendary status. In 1930 the first courses for conducting and musical instruments were held and this initiative later became the International Summer Academy of the Mozarteum. Every year renowned lecturers come together with enthusiastic music students from all over the world to enter a lively artistic dialogue.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Salzburg, Austria
Starts at: 15:00
Duration:
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