Photo: Nadja Sjöström
Mozart and Andrée
Philharmonic musicians in an imaginative string quintet and a romantic piano quartet.
Elfrida Andrée was an organist, conductor, and composer, pioneering the way for future generations of women in music. She was a student of Ludvig Norman and Niels W. Gade, and her romantically shimmering piano quartet in the spirit of Schumann and Mendelssohn-Bartholdy was premiered in 1870 at Gade's home in Copenhagen.
During his time, Mozart was also a pioneer. The influential Cramer's music magazine wrote that he had ”a decided inclination towards the difficult and the unusual”. That's not how we perceive Mozart today. The captivatingly beautiful and imaginative String Quintet in C major is an undisputed masterpiece. Mozart seemingly composed it on his own initiative, without any commission and solely out of pure expressive will. Initially, we hear Rolf Martinsson's thoughtful and exploratory Duo for violin and cello from 1986.
We hear a quintet from the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra together with guesting pianist Martin Sturfält.
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The music
Approximate times -
Rolf Martinsson Duo for violin and cello10 min
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Elfrida Andrée Piano Quartet23 min
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Intermission25 min
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart String Quintet in C major32 min
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Participants
- Joakim Svenheden violin
- Daniela Bonfiglioli violin
- Vicki Powell viola
- Nicholas Shardlow viola
- Marie Macleod cello
- Martin Sturfält piano