Lisa Batiashvili News
Georgian musician
- violin
- classical music
- Soviet Union, Germany
- violinist, musician
social networks
streaming
Last update
2024-04-25
Refresh
2024-02-16 15:10:00
Batiashvili/BPO/Petrenko - Brahms, Szymanowski, and Strauss, 15 February 2024
Philharmonie Brahms: Tragic Overture in D minor, op.81 Symanowski: Violin Concerto no.1, op.35 Strauss: Symphonia Domestica, op.53 Lisa Batiashvili (violin)Berlin Philharmonic OrchestraKirill Petrenko (conductor)Image: Lena Laine For me, the highlight of this concert from the Berlin Philharmonic and Kirill Petrenko was the performance of Szymanowski’s First Violin Concerto, for which they were joined by the equally outstanding violinist Lisa Batiashvili. Almost any few bars – the sound and the direction it took – would have been enough to justify attendance; it was not, though, necessary to choose. Its opening, a fairyland in which orchestral children of Mendelssohn and Debussy took flight to the emergent strains of a silken violin line spun with longing and languor presaged what was to come, such interactions, melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, and timbral the stuff on which dreams were made on—at quite a temperature. Whatever its twists and turns, there was no doubting the musical line […]
2023-10-27 12:00:00
Ron Bierman listens to chamber music by Haydn, Ravel, Mendelssohn and Dvořák from Jean-Yves Thibaudet, Lisa Batiashvili and Gautier Capuçon
The Boston Musical Intelligencer
2023-10-23 23:23:10
Super-virtuosos Jean-Yves Thibaudet, violinist Lisa Batiashvili, and cellist Gautier Capuçon transmitted magnetic stage presence at the Jordan Hall Celebrity Series recital on Friday [] The post appeared first on The Boston Musical Intelligencer.
2023-05-09 20:56:00
New York Philharmonic. Gianandrea Noseda, conductor; Leonidas Kavakos, violin. May 5, 2023.
David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center. Orchestra (Seat BB103, $66.50).ProgramViolin Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 99 (1947-48) by Shostakovich (1906-75).Sinfonia No. 1 (1984) by Walker (1922-2018).Feste romane (Roman Festivals) (1928) by Respighi (1879-1936).Kavakos and Noseda after the Shostakovich violin concerto.The intermission was moved to right after the Shostakovich piece. Which made sense as the seating rearrangement can be made during intermissionLooking over my blog entries, I have encountered this Shostakovich violin concerto a couple of times before, performed by Christian Tetzlaff (2009) and Lisa Batiashvili (2014). There was much about how unconventional the structure of the concerto was, whether the delay in its premiere was due to the shifting political climate in Russia or to David Oistrakh's neglect, and to what is the proper opus number for the work (No. 77 according to the composer's output, 99 per its publication date).Those are interesting, but don't really add to how […]
or
- timeline: Composers (Europe). Performers (Europe).
- Indexes (by alphabetical order): B...