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Sun, Mar. 09, 2025, 11.00 am | Elbphilharmonie, Recital Hall

4th chamber concert

Giacomo Puccini: Tre minuetti for string quartet

Toshio Hosokawa: “Landscape II” for harp and string quartet

Camille Saint-Saëns: Fantaisie for harp and violin op. 124

Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet No. 10 in E flat major op. 74 - “Harp Quartet”

Harfe: Lena-Maria Buchberger
: Kizuna-Quartett:
Violine: Mitsuru Shiogai
Violine: Hedda Steinhardt
Viola: Minako Uno-Tollmann
Violoncello: Markus Tollmann

Giacomo Puccini stands for great opera and great feelings. Little is known about the fact that, in addition to his rich operatic work, the composer also devoted himself to chamber music and even tried out the “big” form in it. Most of his works were created as a testament to the joy of experimentation during his time as a student in Milan - including his Tre minuetti. From Italy, Toshio Hosokawa goes to Japan: he draws his inspiration from the connection between nature and people. Similar to the art of Japanese calligraphy, he sets tone by tone like a brush stroke and creates the most beautiful sound paintings. Camille Saint-Saëns was also an artist of timbres: his fantasy for harp and violin represents the gesture of French music par excellence - lightness and elegance meet clarity and haunting charm. Ludwig van Beethoven was by no means in a light mood when he set about writing his String Quartet in E flat major. A few months earlier, the Battle of Aspern, one of the bloodiest slaughters of the Napoleonic Wars, raged just outside Vienna. A faint hope arose because Napoleon failed to achieve a clear victory. The composer put something of this hope in the face of brooding melancholy into his music.


Venue: Elbphilharmonie, Recital Hall, Platz der Deutschen Einheit 4, 20457 Hamburg

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