EN / RU

Beethoven
Running time:
2 parts by 45 minutes
6+

Рrogramme:


Beethoven

Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano
Symphony No. 6


20 March 2019 Wednesday 19.00 Grand hall
19.00 Grand hall

Beethoven

Chamber orchestra Musica viva
led by Alexander Rudin
Soloists:
Alexander Rudin, cello
Dmitry Sinkovsky, violin
Alexei Lubimov, piano

Alexander Rudin and Alexei Lubimov has been collaborators for a long time, but once you notice a billboard with their names in juxtaposition, you can’t help but think of something unknown you’ll sure hear at their concert, be it a new archive discovery, a brand new composition, or an audacious rendition of something seemingly well-known.

Their musician lives are quite similar, too. Both of them stay clear from mainstream, classical showbiz, large venues, and high-profile events. Ever stand-alone, independent artists: the one is experimentation and visionary (and the first to play numerous new pieces), while the other has more traditional approach conducting and playing solo cello.
Both musicians read music intellectually, but their delivery is emotional and moving. Both are professors in Moscow conservatory, so there’s no wonder that they invite their alma mater’s best students and graduates to their “creative lab”.

Dmitry Sinkovsky is one of the lucky ones. He studied the art of chamber ensemble with professor A. B. Lubimov (Department for the Art of Performance on Historical and Contemporary Instruments), and it was then that he really got into historically informed performance. And later he tried to become counter tenor – to stunning result and world-wide recognition.

Dmitry Sinkovsky the violin player is a winner of some most prestigious competitions in Italy, Germany, Belgium, and Austria. Both critics and public unanimously praise his ability to “play from the heart” and “a stunning lightness of his playing of even the most complicated pieces”.