Milhaud, Matalon & Strauss
Why did Milhaud call his work La création du monde? He wrote it as a response to hearing authentic jazz for the first time in Harlem in 1922, and it was a whole new and exciting world for him. It is also based on African folk mythology about the creation of the world. Lasting around 15 minutes, it is full of jazz elements and percussion – entertaining from beginning to end.
In the same programme, we also play Richard Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra, which offers another idea of how the world and humanity began. Strauss starts it with the trumpets, describing the beginning of human life, through the tough times and dream-like moments, to the final dream – death. It’s a very satisfying piece.
Martin Matalon’s Relatos is a creation of our time – with waves of dissonance that sound very beautiful. This concert describes three very different visions of the creation of life.
14.12.2024 FLAGEY BRUSSEL
15.12.2024 FLAGEY BRUSSEL - MATINEE: ALSO SPRACH ZARATHUSTRA
Rachmaninov, Prokofiev & Scriabin
In the final concert of the season, we perform a Russian programme featuring Rachmaninov, Scriabin, and Prokofiev. Rachmaninov was inspired to write The Isle of the Dead after seeing Arnold Böcklin's painting of the same name. He was living in the 20th century, but his music looks backward.
Scriabin and Rachmaninov studied at the Moscow Conservatoire at the same time and shared the same piano teacher, but Scriabin went in a very different direction from Rachmaninov. As the title Le poème de l’extase suggests, he was the poet of ecstasy – not just sexual ecstasy but intellectual.
If Rachmaninov looks backward, Prokofiev, who also lived in the 20th century, looks forward. He was a master of the music of our time, but in a very smart and gentle way. Even when his music uses modern harmonies, it always sounds moving and elegant.
19.12.2024 DE BIJLOKE GENT
20.12.2024 FLAGEY BRUSSEL