International Prize-Winning Pianist Performing
The winner of the Leonard Bernstein Award is coming to
Wellington to
perform in the concert hall and on the
recital stage.
Christopher Park is soloist with Orchestra Wellington in ‘The River’ on Saturday 27th October. Park is also teaming up with Orchestra Wellington’s concertmaster Amalia Hall for a special recital on Tuesday 30th October at St Andrew’s on the Terrace at 12.30pm, playing music for piano and violin by Mozart, Brahms and Philipp Scharwencka.
It’s also back to Bohemia for the orchestra, following the sell-out performance of Verdi’s Requiem last month.
On the programme for Orchestra Wellington is Dvorak’s wonderful Eighth Symphony, Smetana’s Moldau, and Bartok’s First Piano Concerto with music director Marc Taddei. The music speaks to our heart, always finding the beauty and the joy in life.
Pianist Christopher Park is performing some of Bartok’s most percussive music. The second movement is unusual because the colour is determined by the orchestra’s string section getting the movement off.
The 31-year-old German-Korean
has been working with the world’s leading orchestras. The
jury explained he won the Leonard Bernstein Award in 2014 by
saying, “Christopher Park is a pianist who
captivates
with his fascinating technical mastery,
astounding musical maturity
and a particularly intense
performance style.”
He’s performed with the Vienna
Symphony Orchestra, and the Deutsches
Symphonie-Orchester
Berlin with conductor Christoph Eschenbach. Also
in
Park’s diary has been the Frankfurt Radio Symphony with
Paavo
Järvi, the Cologne Radio Symphony with Jukka Pekka
Saraste, the Qatar
Philharmonic and the English Chamber
Orchestra.
In Dvorak’s Eighth Symphony we’ll be
hearing some of the composer’s
happiest or most upbeat
music, which he wrote through the sounds of an
autumn
harvest. He composed the symphony at home in his
beloved
Bohemian countryside amid a floodtide of
inspiration so swift his pen
could hardly keep pace with
it.
The waltz-like third movement recalls some of
Tchaikovsky’s more
graceful inspirations. A festive
solo trumpet grabs our attention at
the beginning of the
last movement, like a summons to
some
celebration.
Smetana’s Moldau is one of the most
seductive pieces of musical
nationalism ever written as
the river sweeps past the great city and
disappears from
the poet’s view.
Arohanui Strings continues its
relationship with Orchestra Wellington
by performing on
the big stage during ‘The River’. The
teaching
programme for young string players was founded
in 2010 to provide
free, quality music education to all
children regardless of their
financial status – based
on the South American Sistema programme. This
inspired
annual collaboration has become a season highlight for
many.
Orchestra Wellington’s The River is at the Michael Fowler Centre on Saturday 27th October at 7:30pm
For interviews please contact Penny Miles, publicist, 021 644 800.
ORCHESTRA WELLINGTON presents THE
RIVER
Saturday 27 October, 7.30pm
Michael Fowler
Centre
Marc Taddei, music director
Christopher Park,
piano
Smetana – The Moldau
Bartok – Piano Concerto
No. 1
Dvorak – Symphony No. 8
ORCHESTRA
WELLINGTON presents Amalia & Christopher
Amalia Hall,
violin & Christopher Park, piano
Tuesday 30 October,
12.30pm
St Andrew’s on the Terrace
Tickets from
Ticketmaster, $20 GA
W. A. Mozart - Sonata No. 17 in C, K.
296
Johannes Brahms - Violin Sonata No. 1 in G Major, Op.
78
Philipp Scharwencka - Suite Op.
99
www.orchestrawellington.co.nz