Cart
Your cart is empty
Your cart is empty
List is empty
Press ESC to close the search field
An evening dedicated to tango and Astor Piazzolla’s sensual music. With a string quartet and bandoneon, we hear beloved pieces from the Argentine master’s rich repertoire.
The little bandoneon accordion is the heart of tango, and it is often in the foreground of Astor Piazzolla’s music. It is played here by a true master: Henrik Sandås. Violinist Emirzeth Henríquez leads a quartet from the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra.
The evening is devoted to tango, the music that emerged among immigrants in Buenos Aires and the Port of Montevideo, which had roots in Europe, Africa and Cuba. The immeasurably popular Astor Piazzolla transformed elegantly dancing tango music, taking it from tired bars to the concert music of tango nuevo.
Unforgettable pieces of music include Libertango, Oblivion and La Muerte del Angel: melancholy, mournful, emotional. Like many others, Piazzolla was inspired by the seasons, and this evening we hear two of his four pieces.
Henrik Sandås, a musician as likely to play Baroque as jazz and symphonic tango nuevo, plays bandoneon and arranged the music.
The string quartet from the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra includes, in addition to violinist Emirzeth Henríquez, Hanna Eliasson, violin; Tuula Fleivik Nurmo, viola; and Petra Lundin, cello.
Here you will find all the necessary information that you need to know about before your magical visit in the Concert Hall.
Invite yourself or someone you like to an experience for all the senses. Welcome to visit the Concert Hall's restaurant or one of our foyer bars.
Many of the works of art in Gothenburg Concert Hall are connected to music or have a relationship with Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. Here you will find everything from portraits of composers such as Grieg and Sibelius to one of Sweden's largest tapestries, with design by Sven X-et Erixson.