Close-up: Early birds

Musicians from the Concertgebouw Orchestra perform bird music at the Recital Hall

Clément Peigné, image: Milagro Elstak

Musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra and Alexander Reeuwijk take you on an excursion through Beethoven’s ‘Pastorale’ and other works. 

The musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra then linger a bit longer to explore the pastoral landscape. 

Concert programme

  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Movements from Symphony No. 6, 'Pastorale'

  • Lili Boulanger

    D'un matin de printemps

  • Heinrich Biber

    Sonata representativa

  • Michel Pignolet de Montéclair

    Les Tourterelles

  • Isang Yun

    Das Vögelchen

  • Maurice Ravel

    Oiseaux tristes from 'Miroirs'

  • Olivier Messiaen

    Le merle noir

  • Jean-Philippe Rameau

    Le rappel des oiseaux

  • Kaija Saariaho

    Laconisme de l'aile

  • Marin Marais

    Les regrets

Performers

About this concert

In the final movements of his Symphony No. 6, Beethoven sets his experiences of the countryside to music with the calls of the cuckoo, quail and nightingale. The musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra then linger a bit longer to explore the pastoral landscape. Together with Alexander van Reeuwijk, known from the popular wildlife radio programme Vroege Vogels, they guide you through bird music from the early Baroque to today. While Beethoven wasn’t the first composer to incorporate the sounds of birds in his music, he most certainly was not the last. 

Musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra perform their own programmes in the Recital Hall as part of the Close-up chamber music series. Each of these concerts is unique and performed only once as part of the series. It’s the very best way to experience the individual qualities of the orchestral musicians! These intimate concerts are organised by the Friends of the Concertgebouw and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. 

Dates and tickets

About this concert

In the final movements of his Symphony No. 6, Beethoven sets his experiences of the countryside to music with the calls of the cuckoo, quail and nightingale. The musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra then linger a bit longer to explore the pastoral landscape. Together with Alexander van Reeuwijk, known from the popular wildlife radio programme Vroege Vogels, they guide you through bird music from the early Baroque to today. While Beethoven wasn’t the first composer to incorporate the sounds of birds in his music, he most certainly was not the last. 

Musicians of the Concertgebouw Orchestra perform their own programmes in the Recital Hall as part of the Close-up chamber music series. Each of these concerts is unique and performed only once as part of the series. It’s the very best way to experience the individual qualities of the orchestral musicians! These intimate concerts are organised by the Friends of the Concertgebouw and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra.