Christmas with the Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra and Sergej Krylov
Performers
LITHUANIAN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Artistic director, soloist and conductor SERGEJ KRYLOV (violin)
Programme
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART – Serenade for strings in G major, No. 13 (Eine kleine Nachtmusik), KV 525
FRANZ SCHUBERT – Rondo in A major for violin and string quartet, D. 438
FRITZ KREISLER – works for violin and string orchestra (arrangements): Caprice Viennois, La Précieuse in the Style of Louis Couperin, Rondino on a Theme by Beethoven, Gypsy Caprice, The Dancing Doll, Gypsy, Tambourin Chinois (Chinese Tambourine), Alt-Wiener Tanzweisen (Old Viennese Dance Melodies: Liebesfreud (Love’s Joy), Liebesleid (Love’s Sorrow), Schön Rosmarin (Beautiful Rosemary)) and other
About
In this traditional Christmas concert the Lithuanian Chamber Orchestra and its artistic director, violinist and conductor Sergej Krylov will induce the Christmas spirit with the virtuoso Rondo in A major written by the nineteen-year-old Franz Schubert and the audience’s favourite Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Serenade for strings Eine kleine Nachtmusik (A Little Night Music). Presumably, it would be difficult to find anyone with any interest in music who has not heard this work. Although its commissioner and purpose are unknown, the composer was at the time writing a number of serenades and divertimentos for receptions in parks, for various outdoor events, for concerts in the homes of friends and patrons, and for weddings, birthdays and other celebrations.
The concert will also feature works in the spirit of the musical Vienna of the late 19th and early 20th century by Fritz Kreisler, one of the world’s most famous violinists. The Austrian-born child prodigy was admitted by exception to the Vienna Conservatoire at the age of seven, later furthered his education at the Paris Conservatoire. He studied composition with Anton Bruckner, Léo Delibes and Jules Massenet. Kreisler, who has performed extensively all over the world, did not compose many works: we would probably not be mistaken in saying that his most popular opuses are this evening’s miniatures, which are usually performed by violinists as encores.