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	<title>Early music &#8211; Prague Spring</title>
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	<link>https://festival.cz/en/</link>
	<description>81st International Music Festival</description>
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		<title>Semper John Dowland (added concert)</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/semper-john-dowland-added-concert-24-05-2026/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[koubova@festival.cz]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Dec 2025 08:40:38 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://festival.cz/?post_type=event&#038;p=137512</guid>

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                    <p>“This programme invites the listener on a journey across Europe through some of the most beautiful and expressive music ever written for the lute. From the profound melancholy of <strong>John Dowland</strong>, to the bold and inventive writing of <strong>Girolamo Kapsberger</strong>, the refined elegance of <strong>Robert de Visée</strong> and <strong>Marin Marais</strong>, and culminating in the transcendence of <strong>Johann Sebastian Bach</strong>, this recital reveals the extraordinary range of colours and emotions that the lute can offer. Each piece is a window into the soul of its time, showcasing the instrument’s poetic voice and its timeless power to move us. I’m very much looking forward to sharing this music with the audience in Prague,” says French lutenist <strong>Thomas Dunford</strong>, describing his debut recital at the Prague Spring. This affable artist, who has given debuts in London’s Wigmore Hall, New York’s Carnegie Hall, the Berliner Philharmonie and the Philharmonie de Paris, will guide us through European Renaissance and Baroque music from a time when the sound of a fragile instrument evoking both melancholy and joy delighted kings and simple townspeople alike. In Prague you’ll be able to savour it in the ideal acoustic environment of St Agnes’ Convent.</p>
<p>Paris native <strong>Thomas Dunford</strong> is one of the most sought-after lute players on the scene today. He discovered this uncommon instrument at the age of nine, he continued his studies at the Paris Conservatoire and then attended the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Switzerland, where he was taught by celebrated lutenist Hopkinson Smith. He also attended masterclasses with such names as Rolf Lislevand, Julian Bream and Paul O’Dette. In 2003 he gave his first performances playing the role of the lutenist in Shakespeare’s <em>Twelfth Night</em> on stage at the Comédie-Française. Since that time he has appeared in some of the world’s most prestigious venues and he collaborates with the finest period instrument ensembles, among them the Academy of Ancient Music and Pygmalion. In 2018 he established his own Jupiter Ensemble where, with considerable open-mindedness, he presents a repertoire spanning an arc from Vivaldi to songs by The Beatles. His regular chamber partners include the harpsichordist Jean Rondeau, one of the discoveries of the Prague Spring 2023. Thomas Dunford’s critically acclaimed recordings are released under the Alpha Classics and Erato labels and he also collaborated on the album <em>Bill and Friends</em> for harmonia mundi where, together with other “friends”, he played alongside legendary conductor and harpsichordist William Christie. He performed at the Prague Spring in 2014 as a member of the famous French ensemble Les Arts Florissants.</p>
<p>At the concert in May 2026, his Prague Spring debut as a soloist, Thomas Dunford will present a cross-section of the most exquisite lute repertoire from the Renaissance and Baroque periods. The evening will begin with a selection of works by one of the most renowned lutenists of the Elizabethan and early Stuart eras, <strong>John Dowland</strong> (1563–1626). We will hear the famous pavane <em>Lachrimae</em> with its well-known “weeping” motif; <em>The King of Denmark’s Galliard</em>, whose dotted rhythms and repeated notes imitate the sound of military drums and marching soldiers; and the enigmatic <em>Frog Galliard</em>, which became the model for the song <em>Now, o now, I needs must part</em>, about the ugly Duke of Alençon, one of Queen Elizabeth I’s suitors. The programme also offers music by composers associated with sunny Italy: the temperamental <em>Calata alla Spagnola</em> by <strong>Joan Ambrosio Dalza</strong> (?–1508) and the richly ornamented <em>Toccata</em> by <strong>Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger</strong> (1580–1651). We travel to France to hear music by <strong>Robert de Visée</strong> (1652–1725), lutenist at the court of Louis XIV and Louis XV, and <strong>Marin Marais</strong> (1656–1728), who was not only a productive composer, but also the father of nineteen children. From the latter’s oeuvre we will hear the piece <em>Les voix humaines</em>, a wonderful work of understated sincerity and depth, a “chant de mémoire”, as aptly described by leading viola da gamba player Paul Rousseau. The programme will end with Dunford’s own transcription of the violin <em>Chaccone</em> from <em>Partita in D minor BWV 1004</em> by <strong>Johann Sebastian Bach</strong> (1685–1750), of which Johannes Brahms wrote: “On one stave, for a small instrument, the man [Bach] writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined that I could have created, even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that the excess of excitement and earth-shattering experience would have driven me out of my mind.” As a matter of interest, you can hear the same piece in an arrangement by Ferruccio Busoni during <a href="https://festival.cz/en/koncerty/jan-schulmeister-matinee-23-5/">Jan Schulmeister’s recital at the Convent of St Agnes on 23 May</a>. With Thomas Dunford, however, you won’t experience the kind of sweeping gestures from Busoni that were typical for the close of the 19th century, but instead tender caresses from the eras of the Renaissance and the Baroque.</p>
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        Thomas Dunford © Julien Benhamou    </span>
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		<title>Semper John Dowland</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/semper-john-dowland-thomas-dunford-24-5/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[koubova@festival.cz]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 15:05:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://festival.cz/?post_type=event&#038;p=128196</guid>

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                    <p>“This programme invites the listener on a journey across Europe through some of the most beautiful and expressive music ever written for the lute. From the profound melancholy of <strong>John Dowland</strong>, to the bold and inventive writing of <strong>Girolamo Kapsberger</strong>, the refined elegance of <strong>Robert de Visée</strong> and <strong>Marin Marais</strong>, and culminating in the transcendence of <strong>Johann Sebastian Bach</strong>, this recital reveals the extraordinary range of colours and emotions that the lute can offer. Each piece is a window into the soul of its time, showcasing the instrument’s poetic voice and its timeless power to move us. I’m very much looking forward to sharing this music with the audience in Prague,” says French lutenist <strong>Thomas Dunford</strong>, describing his debut recital at the Prague Spring. This affable artist, who has given debuts in London’s Wigmore Hall, New York’s Carnegie Hall, the Berliner Philharmonie and the Philharmonie de Paris, will guide us through European Renaissance and Baroque music from a time when the sound of a fragile instrument evoking both melancholy and joy delighted kings and simple townspeople alike. In Prague you’ll be able to savour it in the ideal acoustic environment of St Agnes’ Convent.</p>
<p>Paris native <strong>Thomas Dunford</strong> is one of the most sought-after lute players on the scene today. He discovered this uncommon instrument at the age of nine, he continued his studies at the Paris Conservatoire and then attended the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Switzerland, where he was taught by celebrated lutenist Hopkinson Smith. He also attended masterclasses with such names as Rolf Lislevand, Julian Bream and Paul O’Dette. In 2003 he gave his first performances playing the role of the lutenist in Shakespeare’s <em>Twelfth Night</em> on stage at the Comédie-Française. Since that time he has appeared in some of the world’s most prestigious venues and he collaborates with the finest period instrument ensembles, among them the Academy of Ancient Music and Pygmalion. In 2018 he established his own Jupiter Ensemble where, with considerable open-mindedness, he presents a repertoire spanning an arc from Vivaldi to songs by The Beatles. His regular chamber partners include the harpsichordist Jean Rondeau, one of the discoveries of the Prague Spring 2023. Thomas Dunford’s critically acclaimed recordings are released under the Alpha Classics and Erato labels and he also collaborated on the album <em>Bill and Friends</em> for harmonia mundi where, together with other “friends”, he played alongside legendary conductor and harpsichordist William Christie. He performed at the Prague Spring in 2014 as a member of the famous French ensemble Les Arts Florissants.</p>
<p>At the concert in May 2026, his Prague Spring debut as a soloist, Thomas Dunford will present a cross-section of the most exquisite lute repertoire from the Renaissance and Baroque periods. The evening will begin with a selection of works by one of the most renowned lutenists of the Elizabethan and early Stuart eras, <strong>John Dowland</strong> (1563–1626). We will hear the famous pavane <em>Lachrimae</em> with its well-known “weeping” motif; <em>The King of Denmark’s Galliard</em>, whose dotted rhythms and repeated notes imitate the sound of military drums and marching soldiers; and the enigmatic <em>Frog Galliard</em>, which became the model for the song <em>Now, o now, I needs must part</em>, about the ugly Duke of Alençon, one of Queen Elizabeth I’s suitors. The programme also offers music by composers associated with sunny Italy: the temperamental <em>Calata alla Spagnola</em> by <strong>Joan Ambrosio Dalza</strong> (?–1508) and the richly ornamented <em>Toccata</em> by <strong>Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger</strong> (1580–1651). We travel to France to hear music by <strong>Robert de Visée</strong> (1652–1725), lutenist at the court of Louis XIV and Louis XV, and <strong>Marin Marais</strong> (1656–1728), who was not only a productive composer, but also the father of nineteen children. From the latter’s oeuvre we will hear the piece <em>Les voix humaines</em>, a wonderful work of understated sincerity and depth, a “chant de mémoire”, as aptly described by leading viola da gamba player Paul Rousseau. The programme will end with Dunford’s own transcription of the violin <em>Chaccone</em> from <em>Partita in D minor BWV 1004</em> by <strong>Johann Sebastian Bach</strong> (1685–1750), of which Johannes Brahms wrote: “On one stave, for a small instrument, the man [Bach] writes a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined that I could have created, even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that the excess of excitement and earth-shattering experience would have driven me out of my mind.” As a matter of interest, you can hear the same piece in an arrangement by Ferruccio Busoni during <a href="https://festival.cz/en/koncerty/jan-schulmeister-matinee-23-5/">Jan Schulmeister’s recital at the Convent of St Agnes on 23 May</a>. With Thomas Dunford, however, you won’t experience the kind of sweeping gestures from Busoni that were typical for the close of the 19th century, but instead tender caresses from the eras of the Renaissance and the Baroque.</p>
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        Thomas Dunford © Julien Benhamou    </span>
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		<title>J. J. Ryba: Stabat Mater</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/j-j-ryba-stabat-mater/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Iva Nevoralova]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 15:05:58 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p>“They make a marvellously incisive sound, so thrilling,” wrote a critic for BBC Music Magazine in a review of a performance given by the <strong>Helsinki Baroque Orchestra</strong>. Another representative of the remarkable Finnish school of music, the group has been active on the scene for over a quarter of a century and, during this time, has evolved into one of the world’s finest ensembles dedicated to the historically informed interpretation of early music. Since 2003 they have been headed by <strong>Aapo Häkkinen</strong>, a laureate of the celebrated harpsichord competition in Bruges, who was taught by eminent teachers in Helsinki, Amsterdam and Paris, and whose mentor was the legendary organist, harpsichordist and conductor, Gustav Leonhardt. Accompanied by five outstanding singers and the <strong>Purcell Choir</strong> from Budapest, the orchestra is appearing at the Prague Spring for the first time to perform two masterful sacred works associated with the Czech Lands in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The programme comprises the modern premiere of the oratorio <em>La Purificazione di Maria Virgine</em> (The Purification of the Virgin Mary) from 1807 by <strong>Antonio Casimir Cartellieri</strong>, second Kapellmeister at the court of Prince Joseph Franz Maximilian Lobkowitz, and <em>Stabat Mater</em> from 1805 by <strong>Jakub Jan Ryba</strong>, famous as the author of the <em>Czech Christmas Mass</em>.</p>
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        Aapo Häkkinen © Ville Paul Paasimaa    </span>
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                    <p>“Bohemia under the last Holy Roman Emperors enjoyed a surfeit of cultural richness. The country of Dušek, Koželuh, Mozart, Vranický, Dusík and Rejcha was a melting pot of artistic excellence and innovation. The two large-scale sacred pieces on Marian themes programmed for this concert were both first performed in Bohemia during the first decade of the 19th century. It will be fascinating to hear such different approaches to church music,” says Aapo Häkkinen on his Prague Spring programme. Both <strong>Antonio Casimir Cartellieri</strong> (1772–1807) and <strong>Jakub Jan Ryba</strong> (1765–1815) were contemporaries of Ludwig van Beethoven (Cartellieri even played in the orchestra during the premiere of the <em>Eroica Symphony</em> and the <em>Triple Concerto</em> with Beethoven conducting). However, while Ryba led a humble existence as a schoolteacher in Rožmitál pod Třemšínem (Rosenthal), Cartellieri, who was born in the Polish city of Gdansk to an Italian tenor and German soprano, was engaged as a music teacher, violinist and later second Kapellmeister by Prince Lobkowitz. Cartellieri thus made a significant contribution to the musical environment at the Lobkowitz residences in Roudnice nad Labem and at Jezeří castle. “The oratorio <em>La Purificazione di Maria Virgine</em> is associated with Candlemas – or the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin – which commemorates the presentation of Jesus at the Temple by Mary and Joseph,” states Häkkinen, who is known for his fondness for performing unjustly neglected or forgotten works. “The most important music periodical of the 19th century, the <em>Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung</em>, reports rather begrudgingly on the premiere, which took place in Prague after Cartellieri’s death on 25 December 1807, lamenting the weak libretto, composed in an overly operatic style – the composer’s evident forte!,” says Häkkinen. “With his Italian background, Cartellieri was an innate vocal composer with an exceptional sense of sound colour, intuitive rhetorical facility, and a joyous imagination. The oratorio enjoyed popularity, and manuscript copies have been found in Vienna as well as in Florence,” he adds. It seems that the composer really was unusually gifted. He studied with Antonio Salieri, his stage works were performed at the Royal Opera in Berlin, and in Vienna in 1795 his <em>Symphony No. 1</em> and the oratorio <em>Gioas</em>, <em>Re di Giuda</em> (Joash, King of Judah) appeared on the same programme together with the premiere of Beethoven’s <em>Piano Concerto No. 2.</em> Cartellieri was also responsible for one of the most important musical events in Bohemia at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries – the production of Haydn’s oratorio <em>The Creation</em> in Roudnice nad Labem in 1799 and 1805; on the second occasion the work was even sung in Czech. It is indeed lamentable that he died at a mere thirty-four years of age.</p>
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        Purcell Choir © Pilvax Films    </span>
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                    <p>The fact that Jakub Jan Ryba is known, above all, for his <em>Czech Christmas Mass</em> is understandable yet objectively lacks justification. Testimony of this lies in the dramatic, turbulent <em>Stabat Mater</em>, one of Ryba’s most extensive works written for Plzeň’s church community over a period of just six weeks, at a time when the composer, as he described it, “struggled with his common malady”. We are not aware of the precise manifestation of Ryba’s illness, yet it was evidently of a psychological nature, and thus we can assume that, during his work on <em>Stabat Mater</em>, his mental state enabled him to touch the very limits of his compositional faculties. “We hear a combination of passionate, sensitive style, a highly developed, early Romantic orchestral sound world, and a solid musical language based on classical German and Austrian models,” Aapo Häkkinen tells us. The life of Jakub Jan Ryba ended prematurely as well; he was only fifty years of age. Despite this, apart from his celebrated “<em>Hey, Master</em>” Christmas Mass, he also left behind approximately 1,500 other works and can justifiably be classed among the greatest Czech composers of the late Classical and early Romantic eras.</p>
<p>The programme presented in the Rudolfinum by the Helsinki Baroque Orchestra will be purely exploratory, bringing to light another piece of uncharted yet important Czech musical history. It will certainly be intriguing to hear this music in its “Scandinavian” conception, moreover, with five superb singers, who regularly appear in prestigious venues in Salzburg, Munich, Berlin, Glyndebourne, Leipzig, London, Paris and New York. In all respects, a fascinating and thrilling prospect!</p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;"><em>Co-operating partner: <a href="https://haydneum.com/en/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Haydneum – Hungarian Centre for Early Music</a>. </em><em>The Prime Minister’s Office (Hungary) and Bethlen Gábor Alapkezelő Zrt. support the operation of Haydneum.</em></p>
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        Helsinki Baroque Orchestra © Maarit Kytöharju    </span>
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		<title>The Creation</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/the-creation-luks-orchestra-of-the-age-of-enlightenment-28-5-2026/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[koubova@festival.cz]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 15:05:57 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://festival.cz/?post_type=event&#038;p=128258</guid>

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                    <p>“<em>The Creation</em> is a work that combines the old with the new in a fascinating manner, in a way the culmination of Haydn’s musical dramatic language. We find here many beautiful, dramatic moments that directly call for visual representation. It would be difficult to find a more avant-garde musical structure at the end of the 18th century than the depiction of chaos at the beginning of the world in the Introduction. On the other hand, <em>The Creation</em> is to a large extent a traditionally religious work, having strong support in the Old Testament model. After all, Haydn himself admits that, while composing <em>The Creation</em>, ʽhe was more pious than ever beforeʼ,” conductor <strong>Václav Luks</strong> describing one of the most remarkable works from the end of the 18th century, which will be performed in the Rudolfinum’s Dvořák Hall on 28 May. Luks will present <strong>Joseph Haydn’s</strong> late tour de force, inspired by the oratorio by Georg Friedrich Händel, at the Prague Spring in collaboration with the period instrument ensemble <strong>Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment</strong>, the <strong>Choir of the Age of Enlightenment</strong> and three first-rate soloists.</p>
<p>The libretto by Robert Lindley, based on the <em>Book of Genesis</em>, the Psalms and John Milton’s Paradise Lost, skilfully translated into German by Gottfried van Swieten, gave the composer the opportunity to create a work of spiritual depth, operatic dramatism and unprecedented imitative effects. <em>The Creation</em> begins with a symphonic “depiction of chaos”, a rather terrifying representation of “nothingness”, which is then swept up into a monumental rendering of the word “light”, sung by the choir. The oratorio is structured in three parts; the first part depicts the first four days of the creation of the world, the genesis of the earth and its flora; the second part deals with the creation of the animal world and of man. The third part treats the theme of the life of the first people, Adam and Eve, while the oratorio culminates in two grand closing paeans, hymns of praise and thanksgiving. The premiere was held on 29 April 1798 before a private audience in the Schwarzenberg Palace on Mehlmarkt (today Neuer Markt square) in Vienna. It was a phenomenal success, confirmation of which even exists in a document penned by Swedish diplomat Frederik Samuel Silverstolpe, a friend of Haydn, who described his impressions in the following words: “I was then among the audience, after having attended the first rehearsal a few days earlier. On this occasion Haydn was surprised by a gift. Prince Schwarzenberg, in whose large hall the work was rehearsed and later performed, was so utterly enchanted by its many beauties that he presented the composer with a roll of one hundred ducats, over and above the five hundred that were part of the agreement. No one, not even Baron van Swieten, had seen the page of the score wherein the birth of light is described. That was the only passage of the work which Haydn had kept hidden. I think I see his face even now, as this section was heard in the orchestra. Haydn had the expression of someone who is thinking of biting his lips, either to hide his embarrassment or to conceal a secret. And in that moment when light broke out for the first time, one would have said that rays darted from the composer’s burning eyes. The enchantment of the electrified Viennese was so general that the orchestra could not proceed for some minutes”.</p>
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        Samantha Clarke © Liz Looker    </span>
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                    <p>Conductor, harpsichordist and visionary of historically informed interpretation <strong>Václav Luks</strong> is one of the most eminent figures on the European classical music scene. Together with his orchestra Collegium 1704 and vocal ensemble Collegium Vocale 1704 he appears in leading European venues in Berlin, Vienna, Salzburg, Amsterdam, London and elsewhere. As a conductor he regularly performs with leading early music ensembles and modern symphony orchestras, including Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, the Czech Philharmonic, the Vienna Symphony and also the Orchestre national de France, with whom he performed at a benefit concert in support of the restoration of Notre-Dame Cathedral. He returns to the Prague Spring with the<strong> Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment</strong>, one of the most noteworthy period instrument ensembles. The orchestra’s history goes back to the mid-1980s, when it was established by a group of musicians who wanted to experience more than conventional orchestral practice. They gradually built up a unique, self-governing ensemble which performs a broad repertoire without a principal conductor; they select distinguished conductors individually for their chosen projects, and have been headed by the likes of Sir Simon Rattle, Vladimir Jurowski, Iván Fischer and William Christie. Their programme for this season includes Mozart’s <em>The Marriage of Figaro</em> at the BBC Proms and the Glyndebourne Opera Festival, Beethoven and Mozart symphonies with Ádám Fischer and Robin Ticciati at London’s Southbank Centre, and Berlioz’s <em>Symphonie fantastique</em> with Sir Simon Rattle. Together with the affiliated <strong>Choir of the Age of Enlightenment</strong>, they last appeared in Prague under conductor Masaaki Suzuki in Bach’s <em>Christmas Oratorio</em>, performed at the Prague Spring Advent Concert. This isn’t the first collaboration between the orchestra and Václav Luks: They joined forces at the Glyndebourne Festival in 2023 for a hugely successful production of Händel’s opera <em>Semele</em>.</p>
<p>Three top-flight soloists will be joining the ensembles in Prague. The Australian-British soprano <strong>Samantha Clarke</strong> is a graduate of the prestigious Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. As a soloist she has appeared with the celebrated Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra in works by Georg Friedrich Händel and Johann Sebastian Bach, and she has sung Mozart roles in opera houses in Australia and Japan. The English tenor <strong>Nick Pritchard</strong> has made a name for himself as a leading performer of works by Bach and he is critically acclaimed for his interpretation of the Evangelist in the <em>St John and St Matthew Passions</em>. He has also recorded both works with Sir John Eliot Gardiner for the Deutsche Grammophon label. He has appeared with period instrument ensembles such as Ensemble Pygmalion, Gabrieli Consort and Les Talens Lyriques and has also made his debut at the BBC Proms in Mozart’s <em>Requiem</em>. Croatian bass-baritone <strong>Krešimir Stražanac</strong> is likewise a leading performer of Baroque music, and this season sees him appearing in works by Johann Sebastian Bach with Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra under Klaus Mäkelä and with the celebrated Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin conducted by Peter Dijkstra. His concert repertoire, however, spans an arc from the Baroque masters to Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, and to the songs of Gustav Mahler. He has given his debuts with the Berlin and Los Angeles Philharmonics, the Leipzig Gewandhausorchester, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and at the Salzburg Festival. He was a member of the Zurich Opera company for seven years. Since 2016 he has been working regularly with Philippe Herreweghe, Collegium Vocale Gent and Orchestre des Champs-Elysées.</p>
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		<title>La dolce vista</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/la-dolce-vista-17-05-2025-prague-spring/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Iva Nevoralova]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Oct 2024 22:25:52 +0000</pubDate>
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<p class="VchozA"><span lang="EN-GB">The <b>Sollazzo Ensemble </b>brings together artists with a passion for medieval and early Renaissance music, nevertheless, they also have experience with jazz, contemporary and folk music. All this is reflected in the ensemble’s unique interpretation which unites an endeavour to achieve the greatest expressivity and authenticity, supported by familiarity with period sources. “</span><span lang="EN-GB">It is not just a question of technical brilliance, but just as much that sense of engagement with both the audience as well as each other,” wrote The York Press. In their Prague Spring debut the group will present the programme <i>La dolce vista</i> </span><span lang="EN-US">(The Sweet Sight) </span><span lang="EN-GB">with its subtitle<i> The music of Francesco Landini, the blind organist of Florence. </i></span></p>
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<p class="TextA"><span lang="EN-GB">“The sweetness of his melodies was such that hearts burst from their bosoms,” wrote loyal Florentine citizen Giovanni da Prato in 1389, describing Landini’s music in his book <i>Paradiso degli Alberti</i>. “The fame of <b>Francesco Landini </b>(c. 1335–1397) during his lifetime was already mythical: it was rumoured that the birds fell silent when he played on the organetto,” states the founder and artistic director of the Sollazzo Ensemble<b> </b>Anna Danilevskaia, describing Italy’s most important 14<sup>th</sup> century composer. Landini is depicted with his organetto, a small pipe organ whose performer manipulates the bellows with one hand while he fingers the keys with the other, in his most famous portrait, which appears in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>. “Payment records show that he was extremely well paid as an organ-builder and tuner, he was renowned for his poetry, for his intellectual views but, above all, it was for his compositional skills that he was truly admired. By all accounts, Landini was the most performed composer in Florence, and he was so versatile that his music could be enjoyed by all social strata,” Danilevskaia adds. His oeuvre, which survived in its most complete form in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>, represents almost a quarter of all existing Italian music dating from the 14<sup>th</sup> century. “The son of a painter, Francesco was only five when he lost his sight after being struck by smallpox. However, his lyrics, which he very probably wrote himself, are very descriptive. The leitmotif of the eyes, sometimes weeping, sometimes admiring, pervades his work, along with descriptions of colour, light and dark. Through this programme we endeavour to immerse ourselves in the “darkness” of Francesco Landini, in a universe rich in realistic detail and fanciful ideas, and to present the music of one of the most influential composers of the Middle Ages,” Danilevskaia concludes.</span></p>
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<p class="TextA"><span lang="EN-GB">A performer on the medieval fiddle (fidula) and the Renaissance viola da gamba, Danilevskaia grew up in the French city of Metz surrounded by music. She established the <b>Sollazzo Ensemble</b> in 2014; since that time the ensemble has won a number of competitions, including the York Early Music Competition, where they also garnered the Audience Award and the prestigious Cambridge Early Music Prize. Their recordings have earned them various distinctions: Diapason d’Or, Gramophone<i> </i>magazine’s Editor’s Choice and also BBC Music Magazine’s<i> </i>Editor’s Choice. They appear in concert in Europe, the USA and in Asia. In 2023 the ensemble debuted at the Boston Early Music Festival and regularly collaborates with the Ambronay Festival and Oude Muziek d’Utrecht. As of 2024 Sollazzo is the Ensemble-in-Residence at the Arsenal Concert Hall in Metz and the Concertgebouw in Bruges. </span></p>
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		<title>Fragments of Love</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/fragments-of-love-26-05-2025-ensemble-correspondances-prague-spring/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Kateřina Koutná]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Sep 2024 14:12:04 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p><em>Fragments of Love</em> – the title of a programme combining exquisite melodies from operas by Italian-French Baroque composer <strong>Jean-Baptiste Lully</strong>. These works will be played and sung at the Prague Spring by members of the French <strong>Ensemble Correspondances</strong>, who are performing their Czech debut. The ensemble is internationally recognised for its pioneering projects involving composers of 17<sup>th</sup> century French music from the time of Louis XIV. The Ensemble-in-Residence at London’s Wigmore Hall (2018) and Théâtre de Caen collaborated on these projects with such prestigious institutions as Château de Versailles, Musée du Louvre, Fondation Royaumont and the famous early music festival in Ambronay. “The programme <em>Fragments of Love</em> that we are presenting at the Prague Spring is a pasticcio of four operas: <em>Psyché </em>(1671), <em>Atys</em> (1676), <em>Persée</em> (1682) and <em>Armide </em>(1686),” states Music Director of Ensemble Correspondances <strong>Sébastien Daucé</strong><em>. </em>“All of them present different states of love: unrequited love, cruelty, indifference, rivalries, madness, laments. Lully’s music can be descriptive but it also conjures up a wonderful world of gods and heroes, in which all the beings on stage share their feelings with people like us.”</p>
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<p class="TextA"><span lang="EN-GB">“The sweetness of his melodies was such that hearts burst from their bosoms,” wrote loyal Florentine citizen Giovanni da Prato in 1389, describing Landini’s music in his book <i>Paradiso degli Alberti</i>. “The fame of <b>Francesco Landini </b>(c. 1335–1397) during his lifetime was already mythical: it was rumoured that the birds fell silent when he played on the organetto,” states the founder and artistic director of the Sollazzo Ensemble<b> </b>Anna Danilevskaia, describing Italy’s most important 14<sup>th</sup> century composer. Landini is depicted with his organetto, a small pipe organ whose performer manipulates the bellows with one hand while he fingers the keys with the other, in his most famous portrait, which appears in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>. “Payment records show that he was extremely well paid as an organ-builder and tuner, he was renowned for his poetry, for his intellectual views but, above all, it was for his compositional skills that he was truly admired. By all accounts, Landini was the most performed composer in Florence, and he was so versatile that his music could be enjoyed by all social strata,” Danilevskaia adds. His oeuvre, which survived in its most complete form in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>, represents almost a quarter of all existing Italian music dating from the 14<sup>th</sup> century. “The son of a painter, Francesco was only five when he lost his sight after being struck by smallpox. However, his lyrics, which he very probably wrote himself, are very descriptive. The leitmotif of the eyes, sometimes weeping, sometimes admiring, pervades his work, along with descriptions of colour, light and dark. Through this programme we endeavour to immerse ourselves in the “darkness” of Francesco Landini, in a universe rich in realistic detail and fanciful ideas, and to present the music of one of the most influential composers of the Middle Ages,” Danilevskaia concludes.</span></p>
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                    <p>Harpsichordist and organist <strong>Sébastien Daucé</strong> established Ensemble Correspondances in 2009 as a group comprising students of Conservatoire de Lyon. Since that time this vocal-instrumental collective has become one of the world’s finest ensembles in the field of historically informed interpretation, regularly appearing in Europe, Japan, the United States and Latin America. They have won numerous awards for their recordings for harmonia mundi: Diapason d’Or, Gramophone magazine’s Editor’s Choice or Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik. The disc <em>Perpetual Night</em>, featuring mezzo-soprano Lucile Richardot, was the best-selling classical music album in France in 2018. “The instrumental textures provided by Ensemble Correspondances are a testament to their virtuosity,” wrote the prestigious British magazine Gramophone. Highlights of the current season include the release of their new CD <em>André Campra: Messe de Requiem &amp; Les Maîtres de Notre-Dame de Paris</em>, performances of Matthew Locke’s opera<em> Psyché</em> in Vienna and Hamburg, Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s opera <em>David et Jonathas</em> in Lille, Lyon and Madrid, and a new production of the opera <em>La Calisto</em> by Francesco Cavalli at the festival in Aix-en-Provence. “Ensemble Correspondances is on top form,” raved Diapason magazine in 2023. The Prague Spring concert at the Rudolfinum on 26 May gives us the opportunity to discover another world-class French early music ensemble.</p>
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		<title>Mozart’s Requiem</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/mozart-requiem-24-05-2025-netopil-concentus-musicus-wien-prague-spring/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Anežka Kochová]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Sep 2024 19:22:01 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p><em>Fragments of Love</em> – the title of a programme combining exquisite melodies from operas by Italian-French Baroque composer <strong>Jean-Baptiste Lully</strong>. These works will be played and sung at the Prague Spring by members of the French <strong>Ensemble Correspondances</strong>, who are performing their Czech debut. The ensemble is internationally recognised for its pioneering projects involving composers of 17<sup>th</sup> century French music from the time of Louis XIV. The Ensemble-in-Residence at London’s Wigmore Hall (2018) and Théâtre de Caen collaborated on these projects with such prestigious institutions as Château de Versailles, Musée du Louvre, Fondation Royaumont and the famous early music festival in Ambronay. “The programme <em>Fragments of Love</em> that we are presenting at the Prague Spring is a pasticcio of four operas: <em>Psyché </em>(1671), <em>Atys</em> (1676), <em>Persée</em> (1682) and <em>Armide </em>(1686),” states Music Director of Ensemble Correspondances <strong>Sébastien Daucé</strong><em>. </em>“All of them present different states of love: unrequited love, cruelty, indifference, rivalries, madness, laments. Lully’s music can be descriptive but it also conjures up a wonderful world of gods and heroes, in which all the beings on stage share their feelings with people like us.”</p>
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<p class="TextA"><span lang="EN-GB">“The sweetness of his melodies was such that hearts burst from their bosoms,” wrote loyal Florentine citizen Giovanni da Prato in 1389, describing Landini’s music in his book <i>Paradiso degli Alberti</i>. “The fame of <b>Francesco Landini </b>(c. 1335–1397) during his lifetime was already mythical: it was rumoured that the birds fell silent when he played on the organetto,” states the founder and artistic director of the Sollazzo Ensemble<b> </b>Anna Danilevskaia, describing Italy’s most important 14<sup>th</sup> century composer. Landini is depicted with his organetto, a small pipe organ whose performer manipulates the bellows with one hand while he fingers the keys with the other, in his most famous portrait, which appears in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>. “Payment records show that he was extremely well paid as an organ-builder and tuner, he was renowned for his poetry, for his intellectual views but, above all, it was for his compositional skills that he was truly admired. By all accounts, Landini was the most performed composer in Florence, and he was so versatile that his music could be enjoyed by all social strata,” Danilevskaia adds. His oeuvre, which survived in its most complete form in the <i>Codex Squarcialupi</i>, represents almost a quarter of all existing Italian music dating from the 14<sup>th</sup> century. “The son of a painter, Francesco was only five when he lost his sight after being struck by smallpox. However, his lyrics, which he very probably wrote himself, are very descriptive. The leitmotif of the eyes, sometimes weeping, sometimes admiring, pervades his work, along with descriptions of colour, light and dark. Through this programme we endeavour to immerse ourselves in the “darkness” of Francesco Landini, in a universe rich in realistic detail and fanciful ideas, and to present the music of one of the most influential composers of the Middle Ages,” Danilevskaia concludes.</span></p>
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                    <p>Harpsichordist and organist <strong>Sébastien Daucé</strong> established Ensemble Correspondances in 2009 as a group comprising students of Conservatoire de Lyon. Since that time this vocal-instrumental collective has become one of the world’s finest ensembles in the field of historically informed interpretation, regularly appearing in Europe, Japan, the United States and Latin America. They have won numerous awards for their recordings for harmonia mundi: Diapason d’Or, Gramophone magazine’s Editor’s Choice or Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik. The disc <em>Perpetual Night</em>, featuring mezzo-soprano Lucile Richardot, was the best-selling classical music album in France in 2018. “The instrumental textures provided by Ensemble Correspondances are a testament to their virtuosity,” wrote the prestigious British magazine Gramophone. Highlights of the current season include the release of their new CD <em>André Campra: Messe de Requiem &amp; Les Maîtres de Notre-Dame de Paris</em>, performances of Matthew Locke’s opera<em> Psyché</em> in Vienna and Hamburg, Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s opera <em>David et Jonathas</em> in Lille, Lyon and Madrid, and a new production of the opera <em>La Calisto</em> by Francesco Cavalli at the festival in Aix-en-Provence. “Ensemble Correspondances is on top form,” raved Diapason magazine in 2023. The Prague Spring concert at the Rudolfinum on 26 May gives us the opportunity to discover another world-class French early music ensemble.</p>
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		<title>AMSTERDAM BAROQUE ORCHESTRA &#038; CHOIR &#038; KOOPMAN</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/amsterdam-baroque-orchestra-choir-koopman/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Kateřina Koutná]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2023 08:51:04 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p><strong>Before the concert at 6.45 pm, there will be a pre-concert talk (in English) with Ton Koopman</strong> (interpretation into Czech will not be provided)</p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;">It would be difficult to find an artist who is more closely associated with the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach than <strong>Ton Koopman</strong>. Born in the Dutch city of Zwolle, he was the first conductor to record the complete cycle of all the cantatas, including 21 secular cantatas. This extraordinary project, which Koopman and the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra and Choir worked on from 1995 to 2005, gave rise to an impressive 67 albums. For this feat he won the prestigious Echo Klassik, the BBC Music Magazine Award and the Hector Berlioz Prize, and he was nominated for a Grammy and Gramophone Award as well. In his role as conductor, organist and harpsichordist, Koopman has made an incredible 400 recordings.</p>
<p style="font-weight: 400;">The focus of his activities lies in his collaboration with the <strong>Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra</strong>, which he established in 1979, and the <strong>Amsterdam Baroque Choir</strong>, which followed in 1992. Both ensembles are celebrated internationally in the field of historically informed interpretation and they regularly perform in prestigious concert venues. Koopman also appears with some of the finest “modern” symphony orchestras, who invite him to work with them and appreciate the opportunity to draw on his knowledge of period performance. These include the Berlin Philharmonic, the Royal Concertgebouw, the New York Philharmonic or the Chicago Symphony. In addition, he is Professor Emeritus at the University of Leiden and the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, Honorary Member of London’s Royal Academy of Music, and President of the Leipzig Bach Archive Foundation.</p>
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                    <p style="font-weight: 400;">The programme for the concert in the Rudolfinum’s Dvořák Hall will begin with the joyful Christmas cantata <strong><em>Unser Mund sei voll Lachens BWV 110</em></strong> (May our mouths be filled with laughter), in which Bach used music from his <em>Orchestral Suite in D major</em>; it was first performed in Leipzig on Christmas Day, 1725. This will be followed by <strong><em>Herr Jesu Christ, wahr’ Mensch und Gott BWV 127</em></strong> (Lord Jesus Christ, true Man and God), a chorale cantata based on a hymn by Paul Eber. The evening will culminate in the secular cantata <strong><em>Auf, schmetternde Töne der muntern Trompeten BWV 207</em></strong> (Come, resounding tones of merry trumpets), written to mark the name day of the Elector of Saxony, Frederick Augustus II.</p>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2023 08:45:13 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p><strong>Alexis Kossenko</strong> plays both the modern flute and all its historical variants; he is also a successful conductor. He has appeared in concert in the Berliner Philharmonie, the Wigmore Hall and London’s Royal Albert Hall, and also in the celebrated Mozarteum in Salzburg. He has performed as principal flautist with the finest orchestras specialising in period instruments, such as Philippe Herreweghe’s Orchestre des Champs-Elysées and Hervé Niquet’s Le Concert Spirituel. He is the founder and Music Director of the orchestra Les Ambassadeurs. He has been involved in the music of Antonín Rejcha for many years and has recorded works by Eugène Walckiers on four CDs together with his colleagues, headed by leading French musicians Daniel Sepec and Christophe Coin.</p>
<p>“<em>All three works on the programme are highly theatrical</em>,” Kossenko tells us. <strong><em>Quartet No. 6 Op. 98 </em></strong>for flute and string instruments was published in Paris in 1820 and is one of Rejcha’s mature works. “<em>Particularly noteworthy is the delicacy and expression of the slow movement and the feverish ardour of the finale</em>,” states the French flautist.</p>
<p><strong><em>Variations and Fantasy on a Mozart Theme</em></strong> dates from Rejcha’s Viennese period. “<em>The eighteen variations in the first part of the work are based on the aria </em>Se vuol ballare<em> from Mozart’s</em> The Marriage of Figaro. <em>Together they represent a little masterpiece filled with eccentric humour. The Adagio is a fantasy in the true sense of the word, a theatrical illusion. The finale returns to Mozart’s theme, but without the closing phrase; instead, the music is re-routed towards an intricate fugue. Everyone loses their way in contrapuntal twists and turns – a little game Rejcha loved to play. He upended the natural hierarchy of the instruments – leaving the cello to chirp in the high registers, while the flute is given the bass notes. Eventually, when all the players are worn out by this somewhat hysterical development, Rejcha grants us the long-awaited final notes of the theme, which bring a welcome sense of tranquillity</em>,” says Kossenko.</p>
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                    <p>Eugène Walckiers wrote his <strong><em>Quintet</em> </strong>in 1835, stating that, if desirable, a double bass could be added to the five instruments, giving rise to a sextet. “<em>This is, in fact, advantageous, since the piece thus acquires an orchestral dimension</em>,” says Kossenko, explaining why the <em>Quintet </em>will be performed in Prague by six musicians. “<em>The theatrical lyricism of the work is truly exceptional. The composer is an excellent guide, taking us through all manner of different moods: From lightness to drama, from grace to gaiety</em>.” The piece also clearly demonstrates the influence of Beethoven and Rossini. “<em>Walckiers adopts the former’s harmonic framework and even a few of his musical ideas. In the finale it would be difficult to ignore direct references to Rossini’s opera </em>Le comte Ory<em>, which was premiered a few years earlier</em>,” explains Kossenko. “<em>The chorale represents the religious environment where the Countess has taken refuge, while the allegro canaille evokes the Count’s licentious attempts to stage an assault on the fort and win the Countess. There’s also a terrible storm permeated with panic-stricken prayers. It’s very rare that we hear so much theatre in a chamber music piece!</em>” concludes the French flautist.</p>
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		<title>COLLEGIUM VOCALE GENT &#038; HERREWEGHE</title>
		<link>https://festival.cz/en/programme/collegium-vocale-gent-herreweghe/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Kateřina Koutná]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2023 07:39:12 +0000</pubDate>
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                    <p>Arcadia, the historical region of the Peloponnesian Peninsula, was imprinted on the imagination of Renaissance and Baroque artists as a pre-Christian paradise inhabited by shepherds and filled with the delights of nature, love and singing. This mythical place, the home of the god Pan, familiar from the poetry of Theocritus and Virgil, fuelled the inspiration of composers at the turn of the 16<sup>th</sup> and 17<sup>th</sup> centuries. Salomone Rossi, Sigismondo d’India, Luca Marenzio and Claudio Monteverdi wrote their most beautiful madrigals with this paradisal place in mind. Philippe Herreweghe compiled them into a remarkable programme comprising thematic chapters entitled Separation, Intimacy and Death, and culminating in the closing Lovers’ Reunion in Monteverdi’s famous madrigal <em>Tirsi e Clori</em>.</p>
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<p>Monteverdi is one of the pillars of the ensemble’s repertoire. When Collegium Vocale Gent and Philippe Herreweghe brought out their second recording of the Italian master’s <em>Vespers</em> in 2017, the British magazine <em>Gramophone</em> named it Editor’s Choice, describing it as “<em>superb</em>”, and acknowledged the fact that, more than three decades since the release of their first recording, this second issue “<em>feels fresh and bursting with delightfully collaborative musicianship</em>.”</p>
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        Collegium Vocale Gent    </span>
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                    <p><strong>Philippe Herreweghe </strong>founded <strong>Collegium Vocale Gent</strong> in 1970 with a group of fellow students from Ghent University. He was one of the first musicians to explore historically informed interpretation in vocal music. His innovative approach soon caught the attention of Nikolaus Harnoncourt and Gustav Leonhardt, who invited him to join them in their recordings of the complete Bach cantatas.</p>
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<p>Guided by their founder, Collegium Vocale Gent built up their reputation as a first-rate ensemble, recognised for their emphasis on the rhetorical aspect of the sung text and their crystal-clear sound. For these qualities the group is known in music venues throughout the world. In addition to concerts involving their own instrumental ensemble, the vocalists appear with a series of other ensembles performing on period instruments, and also alongside some of the world’s finest symphony orchestras, such as Concertgebouw Amsterdam, the Budapest Festival Orchestra or Staatskapelle Dresden. Headed by Herreweghe the ensemble has released more than one hundred recordings, many of which have become trustworthy sources within the given repertoire.</p>
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        Portrait von Philippe Herreweghe in seinem Haus in BrŸssel und Interview mit Louwrens Langevoort    </span>
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