Here you can find almost anything about all the concerts Gothenburg Symphony has played over the years, both in the Concert Hall and on tour.
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"Now I have freed myself from my last love!" Johannes Brahms wrote to a good friend after completing his second string sextet in 1865. The love was the young singer Agathe von Siebold from Göttingen with whom he had fallen passionately in love in the summer of 1858. At that time he had tried to distance himself from his special relationship with the pianist Clara Schumann, the widow of Robert and mother of seven children. When Brahms moved away from her after her husband's death and met Agathe during his tenure as conductor in Detmold, she was very jealous.
In the second string sextet, which was begun during the summer stay in Lichtental near Baden-Baden, there are clear traces of both of these women who meant so much to Brahms. In 1855, he had enclosed in a letter to Clara a painfully longing melody that now formed the main motif with five variations in the slow third movement, and which also begins the entire work in the form of a couple of transcendental quarter notes. It was his only way of daring to show Clara his multifaceted love while she was still married to Robert and now he showed it again. "I speak in my tones" as he wrote to her in a letter much later.
Urban Claesson is principal clarinetist in the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra since 1995. He joined the orchestra in 1986 and has appeared as a soloist with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra on around 20 occasions, including Mozart's Clarinet Concerto and Sinfonia concertante for wind instruments, Bruch's Concerto for Clarinet, Viola and Orchestra and Corigliano's Clarinet Concerto. As a chamber musician, he has appeared with the Amadeus Quartet and the Britten Quartet, among others. Urban Claesson is also active as a teacher at the Gothenburg Academy of Music and Drama.
Nikolaj Szeps-Znaider is musical director of the Orchestre National de Lyon since 2020. He regularly appears as a guest conductor with world leading orchestras, such as the Cleveland Orchestra, the NDR Elbphilharmonie, the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra, the Oslo Philharmonic and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic. After a successful debut as conductor of The Magic Flute at the Dresden Semperoper, Znaider was immediately invited back to conduct Der Rosenkavalier in the fall of 2019. He has also conducted the Royal Danish Opera and the Zurich Opera House.
Nikolaj Znaider continues his career as a prominent violinist with concerts and recitals. In recent seasons, he has performed with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Israel Philharmonic as well as the Chicago Symphony and the Singapore Symphony, where he has also combined both playing and conducting. He has also returned to London's Wigmore Hall, for performances with pianist and long-time collaborator Saleem Ashkar.
Znaider is passionate about supporting the next generation of musical talent and is the chairman of the Nielsen Competition, which takes place every three years in Odense, Denmark. He plays a Kreisler Guarnerius del Gesu from 1741, which he has received on generous loan from the VELUX Foundations, the Villum Foundation and the Knud Højgaard Foundation.
Claes Gunnarsson has toured all over the world as a soloist, chamber musician, orchestral musician and teacher. He made an early and acclaimed debut as soloist in Dvorák's Cello Concerto with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. Shortly afterwards he was appointed principal cellist of the orchestra, a position he has held since 1999.
As soloist, Claes has appeared in some of the world's most prestigious concert halls, including Wigmore Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, St. Petersburg Philharmonie, Shanghai Symphony Hall, Seoul Arts Center and Singapore Symphony Hall. He has also appeared at leading international festivals such as La Folle Journée in Nantes, Music@Menlo in California, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Affinis in Japan, Yuri Temirkanov's Winter Festival in St. Petersburg and the Qingdao International Cello Festival. Conductors he has collaborated with include Neeme Järvi, Kent Nagano, Santtu-Matias Rouvali, Alexander Lazarev, Christian Zacharias and Christopher Warren-Green.
As a chamber musician, Claes has collaborated with prominent musicians such as Leonidas Kavakos, Nikolaj Znaider, Christian Zacharias and Hélène Grimaud. Of particular significance is his nearly 25-year collaboration with violinist Sara Trobäck and pianist Per Lundberg in the piano trio Trio Poseidon. The trio has toured extensively both nationally and internationally and made a critically acclaimed recording of Beethoven's Triple Concerto and Brahms' Double Concerto together with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and Neeme Järvi for Chandos Records.
For Chandos Records, he has also recorded Weinberg's Cello Fantasy and Cello Concerto together with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and Thord Svedlund. The recording of the cello concerto was awarded the Diapason d'Or award. He is also represented on BIS Records with the premiere recording of Albert Schnelzer's cello concerto.
Claes is regularly invited as a guest solo cellist with, among others, the Oslo Philharmonic, the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Symphony Orchestra. In parallel with his concert performances, he is active as a teacher at the Academy of Drama and Music at the University of Gothenburg.
Claes plays a cello built in 1707 by David Tecchler, generously on loan from the Järnåker Foundation.
Sara Trobäck has been Principal concertmaster of the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra since 2002. She studied with Tibor Fülep at the Gothenburg Academy of Music and with György Pauk at the Royal Academy of Music in London. In connection with her graduation concert in 2001, she received the academy's prestigious Professional Diploma and the Dove Award. Sara Trobäck has also participated in master classes with Lord Yehudi Menuhin, Ruggiero Ricci and Joshua Bell.
As a soloist, she has appeared with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, the Swedish Chamber Orchestra, the Stockholm Sinfonietta and the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra, among others. In 2010, she premiered a violin concerto by Johannes Jansson dedicated to her and the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. Her London debut took place in the summer of 1999 when she performed Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto with the London Soloists in St Martin-in-the-Fields. Sara Trobäck has also given concerts in Scotland, Germany, France, Spain, Portugal and China.
In 2002 she formed Trio Poseidon together with solo cellist Claes Gunnarsson and pianist Per Lundberg. The trio has among other things recorded Beethoven's Triple Concerto. Sara Trobäck plays a Giovanni Battista Guadagnini on loan from the Järnåker Foundation.
"Now I have freed myself from my last love!" Johannes Brahms wrote to a good friend after completing his second string sextet in 1865. The love was the young singer Agathe von Siebold from Göttingen with whom he had fallen passionately in love in the summer of 1858. At that time he had tried to distance himself from his special relationship with the pianist Clara Schumann, the widow of Robert and mother of seven children. When Brahms moved away from her after her husband's death and met Agathe during his tenure as conductor in Detmold, she was very jealous.
In the second string sextet, which was begun during the summer stay in Lichtental near Baden-Baden, there are clear traces of both of these women who meant so much to Brahms. In 1855, he had enclosed in a letter to Clara a painfully longing melody that now formed the main motif with five variations in the slow third movement, and which also begins the entire work in the form of a couple of transcendental quarter notes. It was his only way of daring to show Clara his multifaceted love while she was still married to Robert and now he showed it again. "I speak in my tones" as he wrote to her in a letter much later.
Cellist Johan Stern is principal conductor of the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and teaches cello, chamber music and orchestral playing at the Academy of Music and Performing Arts. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music in Stockholm and at the Juilliard School in New York. As a member of Gageego!, the Gothenburg Ensemble for New Music, he has premiered several solo works by our leading Nordic composers. Johan Stern has participated in a number of international festivals and as a soloist and chamber musician has performed with figures such as Bobby McFerrin, Edward Gardner, Petri Sakari, Kristjan Järvi, Daniel Müller-Schott and Levon Chilingirian. During his studies at Juilliard, he had the privilege of collaborating with several internationally renowned musical figures, including cellist Yo-Yo Ma and composers Elliott Carter and John Cage.
Richard Strauss wrote his last opera in 1940-41 in the midst of the raging war. The libretto was written by his friend Clemens Krauss, but the idea originally came from the author Stefan Zweig. Perhaps he wanted to write an opera with content that defied the barbarity that was going on around him. If civilized people could converse, why not countries too? And it must have been provocative for those in power that the opera discusses the quality of Couperin's and Rameau's music.
The story takes place around 1775 at a castle in the Paris area. A group has gathered to celebrate Countess Madeleine's birthday. As a newly widowed woman, she is courted by the composer Flamand and the poet Olivier. She is torn between which of them to choose. The two are left to embody the question of which art form comes first, music or literature, a question that can also be said to be the theme of the opera.
The sextet, which serves as an overture, is composed by Flamand in the opera as a love gift to the countess. The style of the work, however, is neither rococo nor modernism. Instead, it contains much of the atmosphere that characterizes Strauss's own late-Romantic style before the turn of the century.
"Now I have freed myself from my last love!" Johannes Brahms wrote to a good friend after completing his second string sextet in 1865. The love was the young singer Agathe von Siebold from Göttingen with whom he had fallen passionately in love in the summer of 1858. At that time he had tried to distance himself from his special relationship with the pianist Clara Schumann, the widow of Robert and mother of seven children. When Brahms moved away from her after her husband's death and met Agathe during his tenure as conductor in Detmold, she was very jealous.
In the second string sextet, which was begun during the summer stay in Lichtental near Baden-Baden, there are clear traces of both of these women who meant so much to Brahms. In 1855, he had enclosed in a letter to Clara a painfully longing melody that now formed the main motif with five variations in the slow third movement, and which also begins the entire work in the form of a couple of transcendental quarter notes. It was his only way of daring to show Clara his multifaceted love while she was still married to Robert and now he showed it again. "I speak in my tones" as he wrote to her in a letter much later.
"Now I have freed myself from my last love!" Johannes Brahms wrote to a good friend after completing his second string sextet in 1865. The love was the young singer Agathe von Siebold from Göttingen with whom he had fallen passionately in love in the summer of 1858. At that time he had tried to distance himself from his special relationship with the pianist Clara Schumann, the widow of Robert and mother of seven children. When Brahms moved away from her after her husband's death and met Agathe during his tenure as conductor in Detmold, she was very jealous.
In the second string sextet, which was begun during the summer stay in Lichtental near Baden-Baden, there are clear traces of both of these women who meant so much to Brahms. In 1855, he had enclosed in a letter to Clara a painfully longing melody that now formed the main motif with five variations in the slow third movement, and which also begins the entire work in the form of a couple of transcendental quarter notes. It was his only way of daring to show Clara his multifaceted love while she was still married to Robert and now he showed it again. "I speak in my tones" as he wrote to her in a letter much later.