The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Great concert for the 50th birthday

2022-06-21T05:17:29.719Z


Musikfreunde Tutzing have been awarded the Hausenstein Prize by the community. What could have been a better setting than a grandiose concert for the 50th anniversary.


Musikfreunde Tutzing have been awarded the Hausenstein Prize by the community.

What could have been a better setting than a grandiose concert for the 50th anniversary.

Tutzing

– Big train station for a big anniversary: ​​On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of Musikfreunde Tutzing, the Georgian Chamber Orchestra played music in the Würmseehalle on Sunday.

Not only were the sizes of the room and ensemble beyond the bounds, the role of the club chairman as a conductor was also outside the usual sphere.

Prof. Reiner Ginzel also contributed a composition of his own - and as a last treat, the music lovers received the Tutzinger Kulturpreis.

As a prelude, the almost 30-strong ensemble performed Mozart's Symphony in G minor No. 40. The early praise for the former state orchestra was justified: the theme of the Allegro with all its varied forms was clearly and intensively grasped.

Expressiveness couldn't hurt in the Würmseehalle either, because acoustically you could hear everything precisely, but it sounded a bit dry.

chairman as conductor

Reiner Ginzel also showed expressiveness.

The board of the Musikfreunde is known as a cello professor, but is rarely seen as a conductor.

On stage, one was amazed at the theatrically expansive movements, from which demanding gestures for the forti grew just as springily as a dynamic backward leaning when there was a pianissimo in the score.

The musicians, who are now based in Ingolstadt, interpreted the hunter's touch of the minuet with cultivated wind instruments, followed by wonderfully precise string whirls in the profound final movement.

The beginning of Ginzel's world premiere of “Brahms Metamorphose II” fitted this fateful mood.

Originally he wanted to start with happy beats, but after the start of the war in Eastern Europe he "was no longer able to start festively", Ginzel confessed in the introduction.

The original composition, which is based on the three Brahms works completed in Tutzing, develops an expressive middle section from a mournful oboe and a questioning flute, which was exciting to listen to and testified to great compositional density.

Only the final part with the “St.

Antoni-Chorale” (Brahms Opus 56a) ended too quickly.

Three founding members in the audience

Certificates, bottles and bouquets were then passed on: Ginzel presented the flowers to the sponsors of the music lovers, thus to Tutzing's mayor, to the district administrator and to the representative of the Sparkassenstiftung;

also to those who provide quarters with concert rooms: to Pastor Peter Brummer and to Udo Hahn from the Evangelical Academy.

Conversely, mayor Marlene Greinwald praised the cultural merits of the music lovers, who have been in the Tutzinger register of associations since December 21, 1971.

In addition to the certificate on the Wilhelm-Hausenstein-Prize, Ginzel was given the municipality's golden book for entry.

In unison, donors and recipients expressed their joy that Karl-Otto Gigl, Alfons Mühleck and former mayor Alfred Leclaire were three founding members in the audience.

Before the 200 or so listeners, Schubert's great Symphony No. 5 in B flat major unfolded in a perfect interpretation with a night song-like second movement and the minuet standing between heavy shadow and folksyness.

But the encore with a “Hungarian Dance” really got on fire, the fiercely sharpened rhythm of which was based on an arrangement by the Georgian Chamber Orchestra.

Terrific!

By Andreas Bretting

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-06-21

You may like

Life/Entertain 2024-03-10T16:18:53.195Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.