'Music for Peace' Project : Hiroshima, Warsaw and Chopin - The glorious rebirth of two cities celebrating the 100th anniversary of Polish-Japanese relations through the music of Chopin
This evening I have just
arrived in Hiroshima in Japan from Warsaw on this is my first visit to the country. Such a long and tiring journey from Poland but worth every minute given the humanist aim. I intend to keep a daily internet journal of my
experiences here over the next four days as part of an
initiative known as the ‘Music for Peace’ project. Perhaps a few more personal observations as well.
The concept brings together
communities of different nations and cultures, in this case musicians from
Poland, France and Japan, performing together and engaged in workshops and commemorative activities with the Hiroshima Symphony
Orchestra. This laudable aim is to achieve closer international cooperation and
understanding. The passionate love of the music of Fryderyk Chopin in Japan scarcely need underlining. In the 17th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition organised by the National Fryderyk Chopin Institute (NIFC) in 2015, of the 455 pianists from 45 countries who applied, 88 were from Japan which was 20% of the total pianists who hoped to take part in this world famous event. Music is beyond words and is an universal uplifting message to
humanity.
At present such a move appears increasingly necessary as the threat of nuclear confrontation in the world inexorably increases.
At present such a move appears increasingly necessary as the threat of nuclear confrontation in the world inexorably increases.
Modern Hiroshima - evening February 21st
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I wish to
warmly thank the initiators of this project - the Project Adviser, Mr. Shoji
Sato of the Kajimoto music agency and Secretary to the great Argentinean
classical pianist Martha Argerich in Japan. Also to thank the great pianist herself who wishes to
connect through music the triumph and indestructibility of the human spirit that
rebuilt Hiroshima and Warsaw following the unspeakable horrors of WW II. She has been appointed Peace and Music Ambassador
of the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra. Music communicates effortlessly beyond language and can leap cross-cultural barriers promoting concord and understanding between nations. Yet can one merge Western and Eastern notions of art into an aesthetic that could promote world peace? One must at the very least maintain the faith to believe so.
The relationship between Poland and Japan is not a subject that is sufficiently considered, if thought about at all. 'Music for Peace' is an important humanist and musical celebration of the valiant national inspiration that rebuilt the great cities of Hiroshima and Warsaw after a catastrophic war. We must never forget these human sacrifices and their spiritual significance. Such conflagrations must never be repeated anywhere - well, one can, in fact must, hope despite Syria, Yemen....need I continue? The shared moral values of both countries, those of family, patriotism and honour were manifest throughout the creative reaction to almost total destruction. Hopefully the 'Music for Peace' project and a mutual love of the music of Fryderyk Chopin will add particularly significant symbolism to the 100th anniversary of the establishment of relations between Japan and Poland to be celebrated in 2020.
In a welcome
return since the 1964 Summer
Olympics, or Games of the XVIII Olympiad (第十八回オリンピック競技大会 or Dai Sanjūni-kai Orinpikku Kyōgi Taikai), this year will also welcome the
arrival of international Olympic teams for the 2020 Summer Olympics or Games of
XXXII Olympiad including the Polish Olympic team. In short, the significant year
2020 marks a unique and welcome international coincidence of humanism, musical
culture and sport in what promises to be an unprecedented international event in
Tokyo witnessed by millions across the world.
Friday 22nd February 2019
As usual with jet-lag I awoke early at 5.00 am and prepared for the full day ahead. As you can see from the above photo the view from the restaurant was dramatic. You can see the symbolic Atomic Bomb Dome (Genbaku Dome) in the middle distance. Before the horror that occurred at 8:15:17 a.m. local time on 6 August 1945 when the cruelly named 'Little Boy' was delivered, the building was known as the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall.
Before the bomb, the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall
After the bomb
Photo: Dean S. Pemberton
Hiroshima today
Warsaw 1945 after its planned annihilation |
Warsaw - Ruins of the Old Town 1945 and the heroic rebuilding
The Royal Castle in Warsaw after WW II and the present day
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The Warsaw Skyline today |
Before the Cenotaph at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park
Back row Lt to Rt: Makoto Ozone (piano), Kamil Staniczek (Violin, Sinfonia Varsovia, Poland) Nicolas Franco (double bass, Sinfonia Varsovia, Poland) , Shoko Kanai (trumpet)
Back row Lt to Rt: Makoto Ozone (piano), Kamil Staniczek (Violin, Sinfonia Varsovia, Poland) Nicolas Franco (double bass, Sinfonia Varsovia, Poland) , Shoko Kanai (trumpet)
Front row Lt to Rt: Soichi Sakuma (concert master), Mathias Müller (Timpanist, Gewandhausorchester, Germany) Nadia Médiouni (Violin, Orchestra de Paris),
Christian Arming (HSO principal guest conductor and Music Director, Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liege), Gilles Henry (Violin, Orchestra de Paris),
Christian Arming (HSO principal guest conductor and Music Director, Orchestre Philharmonique Royal de Liege), Gilles Henry (Violin, Orchestra de Paris),
Robert Markow (music journalist, Montreal, Canada) Michael Moran (author and music critic, Warsaw, Poland)
(note a Pigeon of Peace perched atop the Cenotaph)
(note a Pigeon of Peace perched atop the Cenotaph)
Inside this cenotaph are inscribed the names of nearly 300,000 people who lost their lives when the bomb exploded |
The need to remember this first atomic bomb, the devastation it unleashed then and the exponentially more powerful nuclear threats that are still with us, are powerfully expressed here at the memorial and in the museum visit that was to follow. As recently as September 2017, a thermonuclear device with an explosive power of between 100-370 kilotons was tested. A yield of 100 kilotons would make the test 'only' six times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima (BBC). The 'Music for Peace' project will hopefully become an emotionally expressive tool to at least heighten awareness of the central idea of 'Arming' and 'Disarming'. The old should never forget the history of it, whilst the young must learn of this appalling event and become increasingly aware of existing threats to the future of mankind.
That Hiroshima was the first city in the world to be destroyed by an atomic bomb puts the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra in a unique position to express this human tragedy through music, war being the heinous, irrational obverse of the human coin. Hopefully through music we can move beyond the misleading nature of language to promote an increased degree of international cross-cultural understanding, perhaps even prevent 'ordinary' people (and perhaps furthermore world leaders) from forgetting this terrifying event. In view of these horrors, it came as no surprise to me to learn that the Ninth Symphony of Beethoven is possibly the most widely popular classical music work performed in Japan, hundreds of times each year often with augmented choirs of many thousands of singers.
Threnody (for the Victims of
Hiroshima), composed for 52 strings in 1960 by the Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki, will be performed at the concert on 18 August 2019. Although written during the
period when 'the avant-garde' dominated contemporary music, its soundscape is profoundly aleatoric and personal, evoking the terror of a previously inconceivable scale of death, destruction and
suffering resulting from the dropping of the first atomic bomb. A timely reminder given current political events. Penderecki, perhaps
even subconsciously, clearly utilized his own deep emotional turmoil experienced during the period of Nazi-occupied Poland. The appalling revelations
of Auschwitz-Birkenau and other extermination camps abruptly disinherited the Western mind from its conception of civilized values. From the irrational turbulence of previously inconceivable horror, he created a work both
autobiographical yet universal in its expression of unfathomable suffering.
We then turned into the museum entrance for a moving, grueling tour of the result, both instant and long term, of the moment the Enola Gay B29 bomber unleashed a new consciousness of the nature of death upon humanity. It is a superbly laid out but appalling tour. In life a necessary one I felt, assuming one wants to learn the full nature of what it is to be human. However unrealistic idealism can be in our busy technologically dominated lives, one must, really must, reflect occasionally especially now on the irrationally destructive as well as the creatively rational side of what it is to be a human being. Such a visit is as inevitable to human understanding as as a tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp in Poland and Treblinka not far from Warsaw where, in the truth of my own visit, 'no birds sing'.
However, the exhibit that moved me the most in this extraordinary museum was not the hugely impressive panoramic photograph of destruction, the dramatic animated installation of destruction caused by the dropping bomb, the video testimonies of survivors (although profoundly moving as some were), the geopolitical history, the design and science of the device, the photos of maimed and burnt bodies from the inferno, the shredded blood-stained dresses, melted bottles, the photographs of the laid waste landscape, the late developing cancers and keloid scars on once beautiful bodies, all were desperately moving. But for me the most affecting was a simple child's tricycle in a glass case.
It belonged to Shinichi, or 'Shin' for short. The little boy had excitedly wanted a tricycle during the war. Obtaining one was more than difficult for his father than finding food but one day the little boy's dream came true and the tricycle appeared. He was playing happily in the garden on his little bike that fateful day when the first 'white-out' phase of the terrible explosion erupted, then came the heat and fires of hell. The house collapsed on top of him but he was pulled out of the rubble by his grandmother still tightly gripping the handlebars of the tricycle. His face was bleeding and swollen. Lying in his grandma's arms he pleaded for water. He mumbled 'The tricycle....my tricycle...'. She told him he was holding the handlebars. Did he give a weak smile? That night Shin died ten days before his fourth birthday.
Shin's tricycle
After a pleasant lunch and some deep reflections I attended the orchestral rehearsals for the coming concert with the conductor Christian Arming.
Lt. to Rt. : Shoji Sato, Chiaki Minura, the headmistress of Ushita Junior High School, Robert Markow, Tomie Futakuchi, Michael Moran, Hiroshi Sakaibara
Each student then read a prepared address in English about their personal interests and the ideas behind of 'Music for Peace' and what it means for them.
If you would like to read these concise but excellent uplifting essays in English, hope for a peaceful future indeed from these talented young people. https://app.box.com/s/ozr3olaigfyloevr2ohzq6twjnqcomh8 We were then shown a remarkably moving and emotional video entitled The Piano That Loved Chopin concerning a venerated object known as Akiko's Piano. It featured diary entries made by a young girl Akiko and interviews connected with those connected to the piano. At this point I would like to interpolate a programme note from the Japanese composer Dai Fujikura who today will 'touch this instrument' for the first time (clearly considered sacred in Hiroshima). When discovered, the unplayable piano was expertly restored by the 'Piano Doctor' Hiroshi Sakaibara
Akiko's
Piano - Piano Concerto No.4
This special piano concerto was written for the pianist Martha
Argerich. Then why it is called “Akiko’s Piano”? Who is Akiko? In Hiroshima, there is a piano which survived the atomic bomb, the smashed
glass window from the blast is still stuck to the piano’s body. This piano
belonged to a 19 year old girl, Akiko. Akiko was born in LA to Japanese parents. There was a strong friendship, especially in LA, between the Americans and Japanese people before the Second World War. Akiko got the piano when she was still in America, this piano is also American, Baldwin, made in Cincinnati. When Akiko was 7, she and her parents moved to Japan, to live in Hiroshima. She kept practicing the piano, having lessons, and when she was 19 year old, while she was working as a mobilized student, the atomic bomb was dropped. She walked and swam as the bridge had already been destroyed, to her home where her parents were that day. Then, the next day, she died in her parents’ arms. Her parents cremated their daughter’s body under a big persimmon tree which still exists today. Her last words were “Mom, I want to have a red tomato.” Though naturally this concerto will have “music for peace” as its main message, as a composer I like to concentrate on the personal point of view. This microscopic view to tell the universal subject, is the way to go, I feel, in my compositions : the view of Akiko's, ordinary 19 year old girl who didn’t have any power over politics (and she was born in US, which means she was also an American) At the time of her death, she didn’t know what had happened, or what killed her (radiation poisoning, as she didn’t die from the initial blast). There must be similar stories to that of this 19 year old girl in every war in history and in every country in the world. Every war will have had an “Akiko”. I am using two pianos in this concerto, one is the main grand piano, then, the cadenza part of this concerto, perhaps at the end of the concerto, Akiko’s Piano, the piano that survived the atomic bomb will be used, played by the soloist. To express such an universal theme of “music for peace”, the piece should portray that most personal, smallest point of view. I think that is the most powerful way, and only music can achieve this. Dai Fujikura (edited by Alison Phillips)
Martha Argerich playing Akiko's Piano. The great Argentinian pianist and winner of the International Chopin Competition in 1965 appeared with the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra for 'An Evening of Peace Concert' on August 5, 2015. Two days later, she visited Chugoku Denryoku Hall and played Akiko’s piano.
“I think the
piano loves to play Chopin, strangely enough. Apparently, the girl, Akiko, she
used to love Chopin and play Chopin. Maybe the piano has the memory of
this.”
HSO also performed the same peace program at Suntory Hall in Tokyo for the first time which was graced by the presence of Their Majesties the Emperor and Empress of Japan. She was subsequently
appointed a Peace and Music Ambassador of the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra.
The video can be viewed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exp6kluj070
I had already noticed the attractively designed, understated uniform of one of the male students. However the next video their club had made concerned the design of the female uniform and even an interview with the elderly lady who had designed it. More discussions followed before this most satisfying and optimistic day concluded among these promising young Japanese students.
Saturday 23rd February 2019
The musically gifted pianist Makoto Ozone (piano) and the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra under Christian Arming rehearsing the Shostakovitch Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor
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There was then to be an afternoon session for around 100 students, members of the public and Hiroshima academia. The afternoon for me began around 4.00 pm with the setting up of my equipment for my small talk entitled 'Music for Peace : Hiroshima – Warsaw - Chopin. A Glorious Rebirth after Catastrophe'
Michael Moran giving his illustrated talk 'Music for Peace : Hiroshima – Warsaw - Chopin. A Glorious Rebirth after Catastrophe' |
The session opened with a delightful and high quality, elegant and charming performance of the first movement of Mozart's popular Eine kleine Nachtmusik as originally composed for chamber ensemble. In this case the ensemble was made up of both Polish members of the Sinfonia Varsovia including the optional double bass, both members of the visiting Orchestra de Paris, and viola and cello from the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra.
We then had an extraordinary and quite entertaining performance by music students who had formed a euphonium and tuba quintet.
Then some small works arranged for clarinet trio
We then had an extraordinary and quite entertaining performance by music students who had formed a euphonium and tuba quintet.
Then some small works arranged for clarinet trio
This was followed by my 12 minute translated talk (translated by a most sympathetic and patient young lady). I think it was received well. There was also a talk comparing Japanese orchestras and his experience of them by my colleague Robert Markow.
The day concluded with a panel discussion led by Mari Katayangi, Vice Director of the Centre for Peace at Hiroshima University. There were many interesting remarks which I would wish to remember.
Nadia Médiouni, a violinist from the Orchestra de Paris, is also a member of East-West Divan Orchestra founded by the renowned Israeli pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim and the Palestinian author and intellectual Edward Said. Barenboim said:
Nadia Médiouni, a violinist from the Orchestra de Paris, is also a member of East-West Divan Orchestra founded by the renowned Israeli pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim and the Palestinian author and intellectual Edward Said. Barenboim said:
The Divan was conceived as a project against ignorance. A project against the fact that it is absolutely essential for people to get to know the other, to understand what the other thinks and feels, without necessarily agreeing with it.
Nadia so wisely said: We are all equal in music. We may be all different but with music we are all the same. In an orchestra we are forced to listen to the others and it should be the same in life.
Jyunko Goto, a violinist from the HSO, reminded us of the Peace Concert that occurs annually on August 6th the day of the tragedy. Music purifies the mind.
Another gentleman, a student of the University, made a penetrating remark for me : Art is a gesture of empathy and song sends a message of truth.
Hiroshima University runs various courses to promote peace and to understand the nature of peace negotiations as well as many other associated topics. We must at the very least maintain the belief, have faith in the power of music to civilize even if...
Hiroshima University runs various courses to promote peace and to understand the nature of peace negotiations as well as many other associated topics. We must at the very least maintain the belief, have faith in the power of music to civilize even if...
Sunday 24th February 2019
The main event of today was of course the concert. However there was a small pre-concert event that was a beautiful symbolic example of East meets West inherent in the nature of the instruments chosen, the Japanese traditional instrument known as the Koto and the Western cello familiar to us all. Some moving traditional Japanese songs had been arranged for both instruments and the harmony of instrumental timbre and idealistic intention was more than a little moving in terms of the 'Music for Peace' project intention of cross-cultural understanding and co-operation through music.
Martin Stanzeleit (principal cello HSO) and Mitsuhara Hiroki (Koto) before an enraptured audience
Mitsuhara Hiroki (Koto)
Concert Sunday 24th February 2019
Graupner : Sinfonia
in F major GWV 566 (Timpani solo: Mathias Müller, Gewandhausorchester, Leipzig)
Shostakovich:
Piano Concerto No1 in C minor
(piano: Makoto Ozone ,
trumpet :Akiko Kanai)
Beethoven:
Symphony No.7 in A major op. 92
Hiroshima
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Christian Arming, HSO’s principal guest
conductor
Guest
musicians:
Nadia MÉDIOUNI and Gilles HENRY (1st violin tutti) from
Orchestre de Paris, France
Kamil Staniczek (2nd violin principal) and Nicholas Franco (double bass
principal) from Sinfonia Varsovia, Poland
The Christoph Graupner (1683-1760) Sinfonia in F major GWV 566 scored for small baroque orchestra and 6 tuned tympani was the most extraordinary and entertaining work I have heard for a long time. The brilliant tympanist Mathias Müller of the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig performed the most extraordinary 'ballet' throughout this astonishing piece of baroque music, dancing athletically from one tympani to another. Such visual entertainment!
This composer is so obscure today scarcely any of the musicians here had ever encountered the name let alone his music. Even producing a playable score from the Graupner autograph was a supreme achievement of musicology. He was one of the major German
composers of the Bach and Telemann period and held them as friends. Highly regarded in his day, he was an indefatigable composer although an extremely
modest man. We do not have a portrait of him as he refused such an image owing
to his strictly held dictates of the Lutheran faith.
He composed a formidable amount of music: over 2,000 works, including 8 Operas, 1,418 fine Sacred Cantatas, 24 Secular Cantatas, 113 Symphonies, 86 Overtures, 44 Concerti for one to four instruments, 66 Trio Sonatas, as well as keyboard music and 41 Partitas for Harpsichord. His superb calligraphy of his autographs and scores caused some to consider them engraved on copper. He was tragically struck with blindness in maturity.
Mathias Müller of the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig with the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra in the Christoph Graupner Sinfonia in F major GWV 566 |
He composed a formidable amount of music: over 2,000 works, including 8 Operas, 1,418 fine Sacred Cantatas, 24 Secular Cantatas, 113 Symphonies, 86 Overtures, 44 Concerti for one to four instruments, 66 Trio Sonatas, as well as keyboard music and 41 Partitas for Harpsichord. His superb calligraphy of his autographs and scores caused some to consider them engraved on copper. He was tragically struck with blindness in maturity.
In 1723 his employer, the Landgrave Ernst Ludwig
of Hessen-Darmstadt, offered him a pay rise to remain in his employ which caused
him to refuse the offer of Kantor at the Thomaskirche
in Leipzig (in lieu of Telemann) which led to Bach being offered the position
(whom he fulsomely praised in his letter declining the position). This extraordinarily
humble man spent the remainder of his life in Darmstadt. Perhaps we should be
eternally grateful to him.
The Shostakovitch Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor is a marvelous youthful work, full of vitality and musical invention, composed in 1933. The piano solo by Makoto Ozone was brilliant and invested with a jazz feel that suited the work perfectly. Shostakovitch must have surely been aware of the 'Jazz Age' that immediately preceded this composition. Ozone's tone in lyrical passages was a round sweet legato, so refined in quality but when required fully invested with an almost rough nervous internal energy absolutely appropriate to the jagged dynamic rhythmic writing. Youthful exuberance was excitingly in evidence in both composition and performance. Shostakovitch was only 27 when he composed this work.
The conclusion and Ozone's improvised cadenza was a magnificent piece of jazz-invested inspiration with elements of 'stride piano' and swing so suiting the blare of the stunning trumpet obbligato played by the musically gifted young lady Shoko Kanai. That unexpected sight of a young girl playing the trumpet so vividly was quite something to witness and hear. She told me in an interview that she began with the piano and then joined a brass wind ensemble. Apparently more girls than boys are learning the trumpet today! The performance swept us all away and received a tumultuously enthusiastic reception by the capacity audience.
The Beethoven 7th Symphony in A major Op. 92 under the Austrian conductor Christian Arming was a magnificent performance of this so familiar work, one of the best I have ever heard live. The HSO seemed to come suddenly to life in performance, something I had worried about during the rather calm even lack-lustre rehearsals I had attended. Perhaps this low key rehearsal is a feature of 'the Arming method'. Clearly they were keeping their driving energy in reserve particularly in the final movement which was certainly the 'apotheosis of the dance' as Wagner referred to it. He actually wrote in full of the symphony which I can scarcely improve upon:
Dimitry Shostakovitch as a young man |
Makoto Ozone performing the Shostakovitch Piano Concerto No. 1 in C minor with the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra |
'All tumult, all yearning and storming of the heart,
become here the blissful insolence of joy, which carries us away with
bacchanalian power through the roomy space of nature, through all the streams
and seas of life, shouting in glad self-consciousness as we sound throughout
the universe the daring strains of this human sphere-dance. The Symphony is the
Apotheosis of the Dance itself: it is Dance in its highest aspect, the loftiest
deed of bodily motion, incorporated into an ideal mould of tone.'
Christian Arming passionately conducting the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra in Beethoven's 7th Symphony in A major Op. 92 |
Autograph score of Beethoven's 7th Symphony in A major Op. 92 |
The reception after the concert was full of good cheer and joyful celebrations.
Mathias Müller (Timpanist Gewandhausorchester) and Makoto Ozone (pianist) in lively conversation at the Reception |
'Music for Peace' is
an important humanist and musical celebration of the valiant national inspiration
that rebuilt the great cities of Hiroshima and Warsaw after a catastrophic war.
We must never forget these sacrifices especially now as world nuclear tensions increase. Hopefully the 'Music for Peace' project
and a mutual love of the music of Fryderyk Chopin will add particularly
significant symbolism to the 100th anniversary of the establishment of
relations between Japan and Poland to be celebrated in 2020.
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It is with great sadness I read of the recent death of the renowned Japanese literary scholar Donald Keene who died in Tokyo last Sunday at the age of 96. His works and translations introduced me to Japanese literature which I have always loved. The first book I read was of course The Tale of the Genji (possibly the first novel in world literature) then the works of Matsuo Basho, Yukio Mishima, Kobe Abe, Kazuo Ishiguro, Kenzaburo Oe....Japan may not have dominated my life but the artistic culture - traditional music, literature, art, even for a short while Japanese Zen - has certainly remained an important part of it since I was in my twenties.
* * * * * *
Coming Events 2019 - 2020
'Music for Peace'
June 20 2019
Hiroshima
Bunka Gakuen HBG Hall, Hiroshima
Program
Krzysztof Penderecki Prelude for Peace
Krzysztof Penderecki Violin Concerto No.2 “Metamorphosen”
Beethoven Symphony No.8 in F major Op.93
Hiroshima
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Krzysztof Penderecki
Sayaka Shoji (violin)
Guest
musicians
Lasse
Mauritzen (1st horn ) from DR Symphony Orchestra, Denmark
Dorte
Bennike (2nd bassoon) from DR Symphony Orchestra, Denmark
Guest
journalist
Ms. Kinga Wojciechowska
, Editor in chief
of Presto Music Film & Art Magazine (Poland)
An Evening of Peace
August 5 2019
Hiroshima Bunka Gakuen HBG Hall,
Hiroshima
Program
Toshio Hosokawa New arrangement for cello and orchestra based on his Lied
Dimitry Shostakovich Cello Concerto No. 1 in E-flat major Op. 107
Gustav Mahler Symphony
No. 1 in D major
Hiroshima
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Christian Arming
Steven
Isserlis (cello)
Guest musicians
Edicson Ruiz
(contrabass)
Javier Bonet
(horn)
August 17 and 18 2019
Warsaw Philharmonic Concert Hall, Warsaw
International Music
Festival 'Chopin and his Europe' and 'Music for Peace'
Hiroshima
Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestra Sinfonia Varsovia
Concert co-presented by
Bunka-cho and Hiroshima Symphony Association in commemoration of the 1ooth anniversary
of diplomatic relations between Poland and Japan
August 17 2019
[Concerto still to be announced]
Martha
Argerich (piano)
Beethoven Symphony No.9 in D minor Op. 125
Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestra Sinfonia Varsovia
conducted by Kazuyoshi Akiyama
Soloists
Akie Amou (soprano), Satoshi Nishimura (tenor) from Japan, Monika Ledzion (mezzo-soprano), Rafal Siwek (bass) from Poland
Akie Amou (soprano), Satoshi Nishimura (tenor) from Japan, Monika Ledzion (mezzo-soprano), Rafal Siwek (bass) from Poland
Chorus Podlasie Opera and Philharmonic Chorus
August 18 2019
Stanisław Moniuszko Bajka
Andrzej Panufnik:
A Procession for Peace
Krzysztof Penderecki Tren ofiarom Hiroszimy
Dai Fujikura
Suite from Solaris ( first performance in Poland )
Frederyk Chopin Piano Concerto F minor Op. 23
Nelson Freire (piano)
Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestra Sinfonia Varsovia
conducted by Tatsuya Shimono
Nicole Cabell (soprano), Mihoko Fujimura (mezzo soprano), Arnold Rutkowski (tenor) Thomas Bauer ( baritone)
March 12 2020
Sumida Triphony Hall , Tokyo
Program
Beethoven Triple
concerto in C major op.56
Beethoven Symphony No.9 in D minor op.125
Hiroshima
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Christian Arming
Soloists
Martha
Argerich ( piano), Soichi Sakuma (violin), Martin Stanzeleit (cello)
Maki Mori(soprano), Mika Kaneko(mezzo soprano), Satoshi Nishimura (tenor), Takaoki
Onishi (baritone)
Choir
RITSUYUKAI
August 5 and 6 2020
Hiroshima Bunka Gakuen HBG Hall , Hiroshima
Program
Dai
Fujikura Piano concerto no.4 dedicated to Martha Argerich (world premiere)
Beethoven Symphony no.9 in D minor op.125
Hiroshima
International Peace Orchestra
(made up from ca.60 musicians from Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra and ca.19 musicians from the
orchestras in Poland, Denmark, France and USA)
Conducted by Tatsuya
Shimono, General Music Director Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra
Martha
Argerich (piano) Peace and Music Ambassador of the Hiroshima Symphony Orchestra
with
Choir
Tokyo Opera Singers and guest chorus members from Hannover
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