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Dvořák Prague Festival 2023 | Concertino Praga | Final Competition Round in Concert
Friday 15 September 2023, 7.00 pm
St Agnes Convent, Prague, CZ
CONCERTINO PRAGA 2023: Final Competition Round in Concert
Dmitrij SHOSTAKOVICH: Piano Trio No. 2 in E Minor, Op. 67 (Trio Florestan)
Bohuslav MARTINŮ: Sonatina for Clarinet and Piano, H 356 (Duo Comenius)
Johannes BRAHMS: Sonata for Clarinet and Piano in E flat Major, Op. 120, No. 2 (Duo Comenius)
Francis POULENC: Sonata for Clarinet and Piano, FP 184 (Duo Comenius)
Bohuslav MARTINŮ: Sonata No. 3 for Violin and Piano, H 303 (Duo Jaklová-Mráček)
Bohuslav MARTINŮ: Czech Rhapsody for Violin and Piano, H 307 (Duo Matejča–Schulmeister)
Reinhold GELIÉRE: Romance for Violin and Piano, Op. 3 (Duo Matejča–Schulmeister)
Josef SUK: Four Pieces for Violin and Piano, op. 17 (I. Quasi ballata) (Duo Matejča–Schulmeister)
Béla BARTÓK: Romanian Folk Dances for Violin and Piano, Sz. 56 (Duo Matejča–Schulmeister)
Trio Florestan
Duo Comenius
Duo Jaklová–Mráček
Duo Matejča–Schulmeister
In the Chamber Music category, young performers compete every two years, while soloists compete annually. The final round of the Concertino Praga competition has always promised to be a thrilling spectacle and a superb artistic experience. Who will be crowned the victor this year?
In 1966, Czechoslovak Radio launched Concertino Praga, an international radio competition for young musicians. The competition has become world-renowned, with laureates such as Dmitry Sitkovetsky, Václav Hudeček, Isabelle Faust, Julian Rachlin, Christian Tetzlaff, Lars Vogt, Zoltán Kocsis, Radek Baborák, Ivo Kahánek, and many others.
In 2020, the Academy of Classical Music, the organiser of Dvořák Prague Festival, teamed up with Czech Radio to give contestants the opportunity to perform on the festival’s stage in front of a live audience and an international jury.
Who, then, can we look forward to seeing on the panel? For one, cellist Pablo Ferrández, who opened last year’s festival with great success. Also, Sarah Willis, a solo hornist from the Berlin Philharmonic, who is widely respected not only for her phenomenal skills, but also for successfully promoting classical music among young audiences. And then there is violinist and conductor Dmitry Sitkovetsky, the very first winner of this competition in 1966. Lastly, we have the outstanding pianist Roman Rabinovich. All of them will not only sit on the panel but also perform at Dvořák Prague, or lead master classes. Albena Danailova, a concertmaster from the Vienna Philharmonic, has also agreed to take part, with the Vienna Philharmonic’s performance expected to be a highlight of this year’s festival.
We are confident that this year will bring us fresh faces and new discoveries, who will go on to have fruitful artistic careers. The 2020 laureate is a shining example: last year, violinist Daniel Matejča won another big competition, the Eurovision Young Musicians contest, and then in 2022 he returned to the Dvořák Prague stage with his unforgettable performance of the Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto. Other finalists, such as Czech pianist Jan Schulmeister, Slovak Ryan Martin Bradshaw, and Hungarian Ildikó Rozsonits, have also achieved great success in both competitions and concert performances.
More information: https://www.dvorakovapraha.cz/en/programme/detail/concertino-praga-2023-chamber-music-category-finale/