Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Concerto featuring Yefim Bronfman

Elim Chan conducts Elgar’s Enigma Variations

Elim Chan - photo: Eduardus Lee image: All rights reserved Eduardus Lee

Yefim Bronfman appears with us as soloist in Beethoven’s mighty Fifth Piano Concerto, the ‘Emperor’. Elim Chan also conducts the Dutch premiere of a work by Noriko Koide and Elgar’s mysteriously beautiful Enigma Variations.

This impressive work is sure to fit pianist Yefim Bronfman like a glove.

Concert programme

  • Noriko Koide

    Swaddling Silk and Gossamer Rain (Dutch premiere)

  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Piano Concerto No. 5, ‘Emperor’

  • -- interval --

  • Edward Elgar

    Variations on an Original Theme, ‘Enigma’

Performers

About this concert

Beethoven explored the very boundaries of the genre in his adventurous Fifth Piano Concerto. It was nicknamed the ‘Emperor’ Concerto because of its grand scale. In many ways, the work was ahead of its time, yet its popularity has remained undiminished thanks in part to the serene beauty of the slow middle movement. This impressive work is sure to fit pianist Yefim Bronfman like a glove.

The programme also features a delicate work poetically entitled Swaddling Silk and Gossamer Rain by the Japanese composer Noriko Koide. Elim Chan then conducts the Enigma Variations, in which Edward Elgar portrayed both friends and loved ones. The composer called the theme an enigma, writing that it is heard ‘but not played’. Discovering this enigmatic theme has occupied musicologists and music detectives alike for 100 years. Meanwhile, Elgar firmly put English music back on the map with this work, and music lovers around the world continue to listen carefree to its beautiful melodies.

Dates and tickets

About this concert

Beethoven explored the very boundaries of the genre in his adventurous Fifth Piano Concerto. It was nicknamed the ‘Emperor’ Concerto because of its grand scale. In many ways, the work was ahead of its time, yet its popularity has remained undiminished thanks in part to the serene beauty of the slow middle movement. This impressive work is sure to fit pianist Yefim Bronfman like a glove.

The programme also features a delicate work poetically entitled Swaddling Silk and Gossamer Rain by the Japanese composer Noriko Koide. Elim Chan then conducts the Enigma Variations, in which Edward Elgar portrayed both friends and loved ones. The composer called the theme an enigma, writing that it is heard ‘but not played’. Discovering this enigmatic theme has occupied musicologists and music detectives alike for 100 years. Meanwhile, Elgar firmly put English music back on the map with this work, and music lovers around the world continue to listen carefree to its beautiful melodies.

A preview