And after?
Penderecki, Debussy, Poulenc, Honegger
What remains after the unspeakable, after the end, after the silence?
This programme explores four major 20th-century works that offer musical responses to existence's two great questions: death and spirituality.
Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki tackles these questions in Thrène à la mémoire des victimes d'Hiroshima, a veritable orchestral cry that questions the afterlife in the wake of the apocalypse.
Debussy transports us to a dreamlike world with his Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune, where ‘after’ becomes an eternal renewal, a flute phrase like an infinite, suspended loop that, together with Poulenc's Concerto for Piano, creates a precious contrast between lightness and melancholy, rather like an appeal for resilience and life.
Finally, Honegger's Third Symphony, ‘Symphonie Liturgique’ evokes the hope for redemption after darkness with a unique swaying melody that invites us to reflect and, who knows, perhaps even to hope.
Duration
1 h 45
Prices
5 - 38 €
Gaetano Lo Coco
PianoMirabelle Kajenjeri
Krzysztof Penderecki
Thrène à la mémoire des victimes d’Hiroshima
Claude DebussyPrélude à l’après-midi d’un faune
Francis PoulencConcerto pour piano
Arthur HoneggerSymphony No. 3 ‘Symphonie Liturgique’
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