Klaus Mäkelä conducts Beethoven

Felix & Fanny Mendelssohn and Beethovens ‘Eroica’

image: Eduardus Lee

The Concertgebouw Orchestra shows its classical and romantic roots with Beethoven's magnificent 'Eroica' Symphony and music by no less than two Mendelssohns, conducted by Klaus Mäkelä.

Discover Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel’s lush style of composition.

Concert programme

  • Felix Mendelssohn

    The Hebrides (Fingal's cave)

  • Fanny Hensel-Mendelssohn

    Hero und Leander

  • Felix Mendelssohn

    Scherzo from ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’

  • Felix Mendelssohn

    Infelice (concertaria) op. 94 (versie 1 MWV4)

  • -- interval --

  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Symphony No. 3 'Eroica'

Performers

About this concert

Klaus Mäkelä has proved to be an excellent Beethoven conductor, and now, he will sink his teeth into Beethoven’s Third Symphony, the ‘Eroica.’ Beethoven changed the course of history with this work; it broke all conventions to become a genuine monument within the orchestral repertoire. Felix Mendelssohn’s famous overture, The Hebrides, will also grace the programme, along with the seldom performed concert aria, Infélice.

The solo will be sung by the superb soprano Chen Reiss, who has been a guest with the Concertgebouw Orchestra on two previous occasions. She will also sing the Hero und Leander ‘dramatic scene’ by Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel, a composer whose music has started to posthumously emerge from the shadow of her famous brother, Felix. In fact, this will be the first time the Concertgebouw Orchestra performs one of her works; attention to her lush style of composition is therefore long overdue. ‘We wanted to create one composition using the works by Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn,’ according to Klaus Mäkelä.

Dates and tickets

About this concert

Klaus Mäkelä has proved to be an excellent Beethoven conductor, and now, he will sink his teeth into Beethoven’s Third Symphony, the ‘Eroica.’ Beethoven changed the course of history with this work; it broke all conventions to become a genuine monument within the orchestral repertoire. Felix Mendelssohn’s famous overture, The Hebrides, will also grace the programme, along with the seldom performed concert aria, Infélice.

The solo will be sung by the superb soprano Chen Reiss, who has been a guest with the Concertgebouw Orchestra on two previous occasions. She will also sing the Hero und Leander ‘dramatic scene’ by Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel, a composer whose music has started to posthumously emerge from the shadow of her famous brother, Felix. In fact, this will be the first time the Concertgebouw Orchestra performs one of her works; attention to her lush style of composition is therefore long overdue. ‘We wanted to create one composition using the works by Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn,’ according to Klaus Mäkelä.

A preview