PKF - LOBKOWICZ series: Mozart. Neukirchner
Tuesday, September 24, 2024, 19:00
Concert from the donor series.
Performer:
Sophie Dervaux – bassoon, conductor
Tomáš Františ – bassoon
Program
Václav Neukirchner
Concerto for Two Bassoons and Orchestra (new premiere)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Concerto for Bassoon and Orchestra in B flat major, K. 191
Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K. 54
Evening Programme:
18:00 Welcome drink and the exhibition tour
18:30 Stories from the Arts — the curators of the Lobkowicz Music Collection reveal its treasures through enthralling story-telling
19:00 Concert in Imperial Hall
20:15 Meeting with soloists and orchestra over a glass of wine with refreshments prepared by the chef of the Lobkowicz Palace
“The archives of the Prague Conservatoire reveal their treasures” — this could be a description of the opening Concerto for Two Bassoons by Václav Neukirchner. This piece was found here among many other pieces of music for bassoon, most of which are still waiting for their new premieres. Václav Neukichner (1805—1889), a graduate of the Prague conservatoire and later the first bassoonist at the Royal Opera House in Stuttgart, was a renowned performer, composer and author of the bassoon methodology of his time.
Sophie Dervaux, the soloist, will be accompanied by the PKF — Prague Philharmonia bassoonist Tomáš Františ.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's composition has enjoyed worldwide popularity since its inception. The Bassoon Concerto, which he wrote as one of his first solo concertos during his time in Salzburg — before his breakthrough in Vienna — is indeed one of the most performed bassoon works in the entire history of music. With Symphony No. 39, conducted by Sophie Dervaux from her conducting post, we are transported to the end of Mozart's career, when the composer began to sink deeper into debt and financial instability took its toll.
Nevertheless, Mozart's last symphonies (Nos. 39, 40 and 41) form a brilliant triptych and are a popular part of the classical repertoire.
Despite her young age, Sophie Dervaux is a fully established performer on the international scene, championing the bassoon as a solo instrument in contemporary music. After studying at the conservatories of Versailles and Lyon, and after success in numerous international competitions, she was awarded the position of contra bassoonist with one of the world's most prestigious orchestras — the Berlin Philharmonic.
She is currently principal bassoonist with the equally prestigious Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and the Vienna State Opera Orchestra. In addition to her solo career, which has taken her to the world's leading concert halls, including London's Royal Albert Hall and New York's Carnegie Hall, in recent years she has also made a name for herself as a conductor.
She will take up the baton alongside the bassoon at the Lobkowicz evening.