Budapest Festival Orchestra, Béla Bartók National Concert Hall, 15 – 17 February

  • 20 Jan 2025 3:04 PM
Budapest Festival Orchestra, Béla Bartók National Concert Hall, 15 – 17 February
A Czech conductor, three Czech composers and a Czech violinist: in other words, a Czech concert. The program features Janáček’s most unique opera, The Cunning Little Vixen, in suite form, followed by a piece which can also be regarded as a violin concerto, Fantasy by Dvořák’s son-in-law, Suk.

The solo will be performed by Jan Mráček: known for his precise intonation, phenomenal musicality and technical skill, critics have compared him to virtuosos like Joshua Bell and Itzhak Perlman. The program wraps up with Martinů’s first symphony, composed in his later years. Jakub Hrůša, a dedicated messenger of Czech music, holds leading positions at the Bamberg Symphony and Covent Garden. President of the International Martinů Circle and The Dvořák Society, Hrůša was named conductor of the year by Opus Klassik in 2023, and received three nominations for the 2024 ICMA award.

You may have wondered how some comics might lend themselves as subjects for a great opera. Well, Leoš Janáček did just that! The serial story published as a comic in the 1920s featured animals created by Prague-based painter Stanislav Lolek and poems by Rudolf Těsnohlídek.

This was transformed into a libretto by the composer, who added the breathtaking natural world of the High Tatras in Moravia – resulting in The Cunning Little Vixen. Despite the title, this is not an opera for children.

A highly complex work in terms of harmony and motifs, the piece deals with the circle of life and death, liberty, love, motherhood and a return to nature. And while Janáček never used the opera to produce a suite, dedicated conductors have done so time and again to increase the popularity of this piece of music whose history was filled with twists and turns.

Josef Suk’s 1903 Fantasy was composed at a particularly carefree time, yet is a piece characterized by rather dark tones, and poses several challenges to its violin soloist. The title refers primarily to the format of the piece, which combines the sonata form with multiple movements in one musical flow.

The opening motif is present in the piece from beginning to end, and while its intervals undergo change, its rhythm and form make it recognizable throughout. The energetic first part is connected by horns to the next section, alternating between lyrical song and folksy fun. Following dizzying changes in chromatics and modes, the finale concludes with the return of the opening motif.

“Not a single note may be changed. This is a classic symphony!” – said Serge Koussevitzky, who commissioned Martinů’s first symphony, following the 1942 premiere of the piece. The conductor was so enthusiastic that he ordered five more symphonies from the composer.

To critics, Martinů’s first symphony, produced at the mature age of fifty-two, made the composer a worthy successor of Smetana’s, despite Martinů’s own statements that he had previously felt ill-equipped to tackle the genre. Incorporating multiple types of music, the piece includes some recurring parts, including the dissonant brilliance of the opening movement, which is encountered again in the third movement, full of contrasts and centered on the English horn. In the second movement, a lyrical passage sung on the oboe is flanked by rapid marching.

Finally, the hard, rhythmic finale wraps up with one of the most exciting conclusions of the century.

Leoš Janáček: The Cunning Little Vixen – suite (transposed by Jakub Hrůša)

Josef Suk: Fantasy in G minor for violin and orchestra, Op. 24

Bohuslav Martinů: Symphony No. 1, H. 289

Jan Mráček (violin)

Conductor: Jakub Hrůša

More: 
bfz.hu

 

  • How does this content make you feel?

Explore More Reports

  • Händel Marathon, Palace of Arts Budapest, 2 February

    Händel Marathon, Palace of Arts Budapest, 2 February

    • 29 Jan 2025 4:52 PM

    A composer of grand oratorios and heart-wrenching operas, not only was Handel a brilliant musician, he also demonstrated great talent as a businessman. In 2025, the music world commemorates the 340th anniversary of the birth of George Frederic Handel.

  • Marathon Northern Romanticism, Palace of Arts Budapest, 4 February

    Marathon Northern Romanticism, Palace of Arts Budapest, 4 February

    • 30 Jan 2024 5:29 PM

    Every year since 2008, the Budapest Festival Orchestra and Müpa Budapest have put on an all-day marathon production, most of them presenting the very best work of a given composer, with a series of consecutive concerts running from morning until late in the evening in the Béla Bartók National Concert Hall and the Festival Theatre.