Young Spanish violinist María Dueñas is currently conquering the concert stages of the world and performing with the most renowned orchestras and conductors of our time. Her technical skills, artistic maturity and interpretations full of character come together in her performances. Winner of several violin competitions, she was selected by BBC Radio 3 as one of the New Generation Artists 2021-23. In this concert with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra conducted by Manfred Honeck, she presents Beethoven’s Violin Concerto with her own cadenzas. “Her mixture of tautness and elasticity, verve and sensitivity was as enchanting as the focused, luminous tone of her violin” (Der Standard). The concert is rounded off with Franz Schmidt’s (1874–1939) Fourth Symphony.
Kirill Petrenko conducts the Berliner Philharmoniker
The first performance at the Lucerne Festival of the Berliner Philharmoniker with their designated chief conductor Kirill Petrenko – Kirill Petrenko and the Berliner Philharmoniker in Lucerne were joined by the Chinese hypervirtuosa Yuja Wang in Sergei Prokofiev’s most popular Piano Concerto, the spirited No. 3. The program began in the world of Persian fairy-tales with Paul Dukas’s ballet score to “La Péri” from 1911, which recounts the story of a good fairy who is half-angel, half-human. And this Impressionist-flavored piece by no means needs to yield ground to Dukas’s better-known “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” … Kirill Petrenko feels extremely devoted to Austrian composer Franz Schmidt, one of the last of the Romantics, who had to endure a traumatic experience when his only daughter, Emma, passed away in March 1932. He subsequently wrote a kind of Requiem with his Fourth Symphony, which includes elegiac laments, a wide-ranging funeral march, and, at the end, a celebration of farewell: “a dying in beauty,” as Schmidt said, “with the whole of one’s life passing in review.”