Evgeny Kissin performs Prokofiev

Semyon Bychkov conducts Beethoven and Schubert's 'Unfinished' symphony

Evgeny Kissin - photo: Milagro Elstak

Evgeny Kissin joins the Concertgebouw Orchestra in Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 1. Semyon Bychkov also conducts Beethoven's Second Symphony and Schubert’s ‘Unfinished’.

Hidden amidst all the pianistic fireworks is a shimmering gem – the warm, sensual Andante assai.

Concert programme

  • Franz Schubert

    Symphony No. 8 'Unfinished'

  • Sergei Prokofiev

    Piano Concerto No. 1

  • -- interval --

  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Symphony No. 2

Performers

About this concert

Together with our orchestral musicians, master pianist Evgeny Kissin throws himself into Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 1, a veritable whirlwind of musical ideas. Hidden amidst all the pianistic fireworks is a shimmering gem – the warm, sensual Andante assai.
Semyon Bychkov opens the concert with Schubert’s ‘Unfinished’ Symphony in B Minor. No one quite knows why this lyrical work consists of only two movements. Did Schubert stop working on it because he felt he couldn’t surpass Beethoven after all? In any event, Schubert never got to experience the work’s later popularity for himself.

Twenty years earlier, Beethoven composed his Symphony No. 2, a work brimming with a lust for life and bursting with musical inventions and jokes that still shocked audiences on the threshold of the nineteenth century.

Dates and tickets

About this concert

Together with our orchestral musicians, master pianist Evgeny Kissin throws himself into Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 1, a veritable whirlwind of musical ideas. Hidden amidst all the pianistic fireworks is a shimmering gem – the warm, sensual Andante assai.
Semyon Bychkov opens the concert with Schubert’s ‘Unfinished’ Symphony in B Minor. No one quite knows why this lyrical work consists of only two movements. Did Schubert stop working on it because he felt he couldn’t surpass Beethoven after all? In any event, Schubert never got to experience the work’s later popularity for himself.

Twenty years earlier, Beethoven composed his Symphony No. 2, a work brimming with a lust for life and bursting with musical inventions and jokes that still shocked audiences on the threshold of the nineteenth century.

A preview