Euro-Baroque Song Contest (LAUTTEN COMPAGNEY BERLIN)
The Euro-Baroque Song Contest is a dazzling musical firework display, brimming with sparkling coloratura, passionate emotions, and theatrical brilliance. The stars of the evening are the winners of Europe's most prestigious singing competitions. Reaching a high level of renown for their age, they compete with their arias like celebrated prima donnas of yesteryear, vying for fame and favor; jealousy and ecstasy, triumph and tragedy blaze in resounding flames. Virtuoso voices soar like flares, instruments unleash magnificent tidal waves – and dancers accompany the show with seductive elegance, fluid sensuality, and glamorous flair. In dazzling performances that blend Baroque splendor with modern stagecraft, they celebrate the sheer joy of spectacle – until finally, the audience itself awards the "Grand Prix." "Europe: Twelve Points!"
David’s Lament | Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra
Israeli premiere of the oratorio “David’s Lament for the Death of Saul and Jonathan” by William Boyce, one of the most important composers active in London in the first half of the 18th century. The concert will also feature one of Handel’s Chandos Anthems.
David’s Lament | Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra
Israeli premiere of the oratorio “David’s Lament for the Death of Saul and Jonathan” by William Boyce, one of the most important composers active in London in the first half of the 18th century. The concert will also feature one of Handel’s Chandos Anthems.
David’s Lament | Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra
Israeli premiere of the oratorio “David’s Lament for the Death of Saul and Jonathan” by William Boyce, one of the most important composers active in London in the first half of the 18th century. The concert will also feature one of Handel’s Chandos Anthems.
The Händel passion
This program of music by Handel and Bach recreates an extraordinary event: Good Friday, 1747, when J.S. Bach performed Handel's arias in Leipzig during a performance of the Markus Passion.
This is a truly exceptional event, likely the only known instance of artistic interaction between these composers, both born in 1685 and contemporaries.
The program presents the seven Handel arias that Bach performed that day in Leipzig, including some recitatives to provide the precise context of the Passion in which each piece is situated, and juxtaposes them with other Bach arias related to the Easter liturgy.
The Händel passion
This program of music by Handel and Bach recreates an extraordinary event: Good Friday, 1747, when J.S. Bach performed Handel's arias in Leipzig during a performance of the Markus Passion.
This is a truly exceptional event, likely the only known instance of artistic interaction between these composers, both born in 1685 and contemporaries.
The program presents the seven Handel arias that Bach performed that day in Leipzig, including some recitatives to provide the precise context of the Passion in which each piece is situated, and juxtaposes them with other Bach arias related to the Easter liturgy.
The Händel passion
This program of music by Handel and Bach recreates an extraordinary event: Good Friday, 1747, when J.S. Bach performed Handel's arias in Leipzig during a performance of the Markus Passion.
This is a truly exceptional event, likely the only known instance of artistic interaction between these composers, both born in 1685 and contemporaries.
The program presents the seven Handel arias that Bach performed that day in Leipzig, including some recitatives to provide the precise context of the Passion in which each piece is situated, and juxtaposes them with other Bach arias related to the Easter liturgy.
Schubert by Candlelight
Schubertiade at Blackheath Halls
Join SongEasel on the eve of Franz Schubert's birthday for an intimate celebration of his Lieder, featuring international rising stars Lucy Gibbs and Itamar Hildesheim alongside Artistic Director Jocelyn Freeman.
J.S. Bach: Christmas Oratiroio Cantata III
Solo: Evangelist
Members of the Ulm Philharmonic Orchestra
Motet Choir of the Münsterkantorei
Conductor: Friedemann Johannes Wieland