The second diversion from the orchestra’s Baroque core repertoire springs from another long-term cooperation with an important international institution, this time with the Fryderyk Chopin Institute in Warsaw. “This year I will be conducting Polish musicians at the finals of the prestigious Fryderyk Chopin International Piano Competition, which is dedicated to historic pianos. The two Chopin piano concertos will be performed. A few days later, the audience at the Rudolfinum will also hear one of these concertos, in our performance, with the new laureate of the competition as soloist,” Luks explains, adding that the orchestra will announce the name of the soloist and the choice of the Chopin concerto on 16 October.
The November evening at the Rudolfinum will take the audience back in time to the beginnings of the Baroque with the music of Claudio Monteverdi. His Marian Vespers is at the same time a work that foreshadowed the direction of European thought for centuries to come, and therefore still inspires admiration and respect today. In December, the audience can look forward to hearing two jewels of the High Baroque performed by Collegium 1704 and Collegium Vocale 1704: Missa Corporis Domini by Jan Dismas Zelenka will be performed for the first time, together with the setting of the Marian hymn known as Magnificat, one of Johann Sebastian Bach‘s most popular compositions ever.
