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From the New World

Alma Mahler's Seven Songs immediately lead us into the world of the turn of the century: emotions between melancholy and hope, set to music with a deep, almost intimate expressiveness. In the arrangement for medium voice and orchestra, they unfold a sonic dimension that both touches and inspires. On the other hand, Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, known as "From the New World," is quite different. It bridges the gap between two continents and pours the impressions of a life in foreign America into grand symphonic arches. Longing sounds here like a distant memory, pulsating yet full of vastness. Dvořák's famous English horn theme, often referred to as the "Song of the Lonely Wanderer," captivates as much as the dynamic contrasts between drama and delicate lyricism. An evening that explores completely different soundscapes – and shows how diverse musical longing can sound.

Program

Dora Pejačević
Overture in D minor

Alma Mahler
Seven Songs arranged for voice and orchestra

Antonín Dvořák
Symphony No. 9 in E minor "From the New World" (1893)

Contributer

Emmanuel Tjeknavorian
Conductor

Tara Erraught
Mezzo-soprano

Dresdner Philharmonie
Orchestra