Details
Trinity College Chapel
Trinity Street
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
CB2 1TQ
England
Programme
Johann Sebastian Bach – Concerto in D minor, BWV 974: Adagio (tr. A Marcello's oboe concerto)
Cesar Franck – Prelude, Fugue et Variation, Op.18
Aleksandr Scriabin – 5 Preludes, Op.74
Aleksandr Scriabin – Vers la Flamme, Op.72
~ Interval ~
Claude Debussy – Nuit d’étoiles, L.4
Charles Gounod – Le soir
Kurt Weill – Youkali
Kurt Weill – Lost in the stars
Reynaldo Hahn – L'heure exquise
~ Interval ~
Claude Debussy – Claire de lune (arr. flute and strings)
Takashi Yoshimatsu – To a disappeared pleiade
Sergei Rachmaninov – Prelude in D Major, Op.23 no.4
Claude Debussy – Images, Book 2: Et la lune descend sur le temple qui fût
Aleksandr Scriabin – Piano Sonata no.10, Op.70
Performers
Olga Stezhko – piano
Sylvia Chan – piano
Programme Note
"LOST IN THE STARS ... THAT ARE ALIGNED": a piano and song celebration of stars ... sparkling, bursting, living, colliding, wished-upon, (re-)aligned, remembered
Join Sylvia Chan and Olga Stezhko, two musicians who have a shared interest in the sciences, on a voyage of piano and song music of Bach, Franck, Rachmaninoff, Debussy, Gounod, Weill, Yoshimatsu, Scriabin and Hahn. There will be a piece dedicated to gravitational waves too.
And who else but the delightful Dame Professor Jocelyn Bell Burnell will read a few selected poems about stars in between the songs ... in the process of which we may all get a little reminder that "we are all made of stardust"!
"Extraordinary presence" ... "Enthralling artistry"
The Classical Group goes back to Cambridge to present its first programme in the “Reach for the stars” concert series, to take place in the magnificent setting of the Chapel at Trinity College, Cambridge, on 16 December (which happens to be Beethoven’s birthday). Entitled “Lost in the stars …. that are aligned”, it will be an evening of piano music and songs in celebration of the sciences and arts of stars, including the first-ever detection of gravitational waves in 2015, the 100th anniversary of the expedition to measure and observe the solar eclipses in 1919 that provided one of the early support for Einstein’s theory, as well as the 50th anniversary of man landing on the Moon.
This is an exciting opportunity to hear 2 prizewinning musicians, with Olga appearing in Cambridge for the first time, and Sylvia returning to Trinity, in a concert in 3 parts, namely “Heavenly harmonies” followed by “Lost in the stars”, and eventually “Stars aligned”.
Come celebrate the arts and sciences of stars and songs-with-words as well as songs-without-words about stars!
[You can download the concert full flyer here].
We cannot think of a more perfect (and hypnotic) piece for this beautiful setting of the Trinity Chapel than Bach’s Adagio, which will start the concert, while Franck’s baroque-romantic piece will fill the resonant setting of Trinity’s Chapel with a melancholic radiance and in turn be followed by Scriabin’s 5 Preludes (Op.74) that seem to weave poetry about the cosmic bodies “out there” in their different stages of development, leading us to finish Part 1 with the pulsating Vers la flamme that ends almost audibly as a star spins and explodes on itself.
Our feelings about stars get more personal in Part 2 with some poetic songs-with-words; stars not only inspire us to project hopes onto them, they spur memories of past loves (Debussy, Nuit d’étoiles), their rays stream from afar to touch our eyes (Gounod, Le soir), they speak to us about finding our way amongst the stars (Weill, Lost in the stars), but sometimes inspire us to impossible follies (Weill, Youkali), and finally the iridescent stars of the evening bring us a calm that is a "perfect hour" to dream (Hahn, L’heure exquise ... on Verlaine's poetry) (bringing us perfectly to the intermission).
In Part 3, the programme will reprise with none other than Debussy's iconic Clair de lune (that is inspired by Verlaine's poem of the same name and starts with "Votre âme est un paysage choisi"), with the poet reflecting on various things in the still moonlight, continuing with the classic and modern lyricism of Rachmaninoff’s Prelude in D and Yoshimatsu’s To a disappeared pleiade, respectively, before it touches us with another Debussy piece, this time from Book II of Images that seems to be about an experience that leaves imprints in our souls (knowingly and reflectively), as if the stars are silently aligning, and finally dances away in Scriabin’s sonata 10, the "kisses of the sun" sonata that is mysterious and exciting in equal measure.
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A limited number of tickets will be sold (subject to availability) at the door 30 minutes before the concert.
* * By kind permission of the Master and Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge University. * *
£18 (£10) tickets are for seats in Section A (front to mid-chapel rows).
£14 (£6) tickets are for seats in Section B (mid- to back-chapel rows).
A detailed programme booklet and wine / drink is included in the ticket price.
A special collection of poems about stars will also be launched at the concert.
Concert info also at: http://trinitycollegechapel.com/concerts/
https://lost-in-the-stars.eventbrite.co.uk
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Olga Stezhko is a London-based award-winning recitalist and recording artist, and a leading interpreter of early and mid-20th century piano repertoire. Acclaimed by Classical Source as “a supremely delicate master of her instrument” who possesses “an extraordinary presence” for her performance in a Wigmore Hall recital, Olga has played at premier venues including Barbican Hall, Salle Cortot and Carnegie Hall, both as a soloist and in recital, with recent appearances at Palermo Classica Festival, Leeds International Concert Season, amongst others. Having made her debut at the Minsk National Opera House at the age of 8, Olga went on to study with Ian Fountain at the RAM winning Myra Hess Scholarship and the Philharmonia Orchestra/Martin Musical Scholarship Fund Award, amongst others. Her debut album “Eta Carinae”, with music by Scriabin and Busoni, and relating their music to physics and philosophy, was hailed by Gramophone Magazine as “an outstanding debut” and “not a record for the faint-hearted but rather for those who enjoy dark and menacing regions of the mind”. Her second album “Et la lune descend” was released in 2018 to mark the centenary of Debussy's death.
Anyone who has heard Sylvia Chan on the piano knows her performances are not-to-be-missed. Sylvia studied the piano with Christopher Elton at the Royal Academy of Music in London while studying at Trinity College Cambridge. Having started both the piano and voice training at the age of 7, her teachers also included Eleanor Wong in Hong Kong and Hamish Milne in London, and she performed as a solo pianist and in a duo with cellist Miriam Kirby (The Hague String Trio), including in St John’s Smith Square, London, West Road Concert Hall, Cambridge, and recorded as a soloist (Bach, Brahms and Liszt). Sylvia is one of the most fascinating pianists performing today, having decided to return to practising and performing after a break of more than 15 years, a pianist known for her highly accomplished playing, musical flair and keen understanding of the music, and having also studied Natural Sciences at Trinity, now honing her craft with a mind that often enables fresh perspectives and connects dots in unexpected or adventurous ways.