Cart
Your cart is empty
Your cart is empty
List is empty
Press ESC to close the search field
With a light and careful approach, musicians from the Gothenburg Symphony present an emotional chamber music concert. Music from two female pioneers becomes an intimate conversation between the piano and strings.
As a major star in the 19th century, pianist Clara Schumann toured Europe. As a married woman, she had to abandon her own composition practice, but she remained a highly respected musician and ambassador for her husband Robert Schumann’s music. They were considered the most exciting couple in music at the time.
Robert Schumann composed his String Quartet No. 3 during a few intense weeks of summer, when he and Clara had been married for two years. The quartet is rhythmic and full of long, romantic melodies.
American composer and pianist Amy Beach paints her Piano Quintet with dramatic brush strokes. She embarked upon her professional path as a pianist already as a teenager. Her concerts were put on hold when she was married, but she was famous in the US and Europe in her own lifetime. The Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor premiered in Boston with Beach herself on piano 118 years ago.
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.