Jockel. Haydn. Bach. Mozart

Orchestral series A
Dvořák Hall Rudolfinum
Jan Palach Square 79/1, Prague

Tickets: CZK 500–1,300 | Standing room: CZK 200

cello
conductor, harpsichord
Oscar Jockel
Floris Glacialis
Joseph Haydn
Cello Concerto No. 2 in D major, Hob.VIIb:2
Johann Sebastian Bach
Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D major, BWV 1068
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphony No. 38 in D major “Prague”, KV 504

The second subscription concert of the Orchestral Series will combine the latest music with works by masters of earlier periods. Oscar Jockel will perform the demanding, but historically traditional dual role of composer-conductor.

Despite his young age, he has managed to captivate audiences, critics, as well as the world’s leading conductors. He has been conducting assistant to Kirill Petrenko, the Chief Conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, and demonstrated his professional qualities with the Prague Philharmonia in the past.

The evening will open with Jockel’s composition Floris Glacialis (Ice Flower). He says that he has been inspired by looking at snowflakes, “how each one is absolutely individual but at the same time rigidly structured.”

In addition to being the conductor-composer, Jockel will also take on the part of basso continuo as harpsichordist, again in keeping with historical convention. He will play the harpsichord in Johann Sebastian Bach’s Orchestral Suite No. 3, built according to a (modified) plan of one of the most important Baroque cyclic forms: a dance suite.

The Classical era will be represented by two compositions. Mozart’s Symphony No. 38 “Prague” belongs to masterpieces of this Salzburg-born composer, while testifying to his cordial relationship with the city of Prague.

The soloist of the evening is the young cellist Brannon Cho, who is praised by the critics for his “burnished tone, spellbinding technique, and probing musical mind”. He will showcase his skills in Haydn’s Concerto for Cello and Orchestra in D major.

This composition is one of the most important pieces in cello literature – although Czech listeners may be disappointed to learn that the assertion that it was composed for the Czech cellist Antonín Kraft has recently been proven wrong.

Patron
RSBC
General partner
Komerční banka
With support
Hl.město Praha
Ministerstvo kultury
Principal partner
Hyundai
General media partner
Česká televize
Partneři zvuku
Portu Gallery
Wood & Company
Partners
RENOMIA
Mozart Prague