Christmas Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

Go to content
Christmas Concert
Elsa Benoit, photo: James Bellorini

Christmas motifs have been written into numerous pages of Western classical music, and not only on the occasion of the festivities that open the carnival season. In the second movement of George Frideric Handel’s Concerto a due cori, one can easily recognise an excerpt of the joyful, punctuated rhythm of the chorus Lift up your heads from the Messiah’s second movement, which tells the story of the life, death and resurrection of Christ.

Johann Sebastian Bach, fulfilling the demands of the Protestant liturgical calendar by the sweat of his brow, wrote many works for the Christmas season. In so doing, he also drew inspiration from Italian musicians, including the composer of the famous ‘Christmas Eve’ Concerto Grosso in G minor, Arcangelo Corelli. Bach’s showstopping solo cantata Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen suited a variety of festive occasions due to its universal, laudatory text. Its virtuosic coloratura parts require soprano and trumpet soloists of the highest calibre. 

Christmas themes can also be found in the text of the Credo. One of the most beautiful passages in Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Mass in C minor – not without reason referred to as the ‘Great’ – is the expansive, mellifluous aria ‘Et incarnatus est’ from the Credo. Mozart wrote it with his vocally gifted wife Constanze in mind, just as years before he had penned the showstopping motet ‘Exsultate, jubilate’ for the famous Italian soprano Venanzio Rauzzini.

Close

Benjamin Bayl

Benjamin Bayl is Associate Director of The Hanover Band, and co-founder of the Australian Romantic & Classical Orchestra. Holding both Dutch and Australian citizenship, he was the first Australian organ scholar at King’s College Cambridge, and then studied conducting at London’s National Opera Studio and Royal Academy of Music. He was appointed assistant conductor to Iván Fischer at the Budapest Festival Orchestra and the Konzerthausorchester Berlin. He also assisted Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Daniel Harding and Richard Hickox.

In recent seasons, Benjamin Bayl has made highly successful debuts with Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, Sydney and Melbourne Symphony Orchestras, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra, Auckland Philharmonia, Orquesta Sinfónica del Principado de Asturias, Taipei Symphony Orchestra and Orchestra Filharmonica di Torino, among others. He is naturally at home with broad range of repertoire embracing the great Viennese classics, historically informed Baroque and Romantic music, and world premieres of new commissions.

In the realm of opera, he has conducted at major opera houses, including Wiener Staatsoper, Dutch National Opera, Staatsoper Berlin, Staatsoper Stuttgart, Royal Danish Opera, Norwegian National Opera and Ballet, Theater an der Wien, Opera Ballet Vlaanderen, Ópera de Oviedo, Hungarian State Opera House, Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera in Warsaw, Deutsche Oper am Rhein, Theater Aachen and Opera Australia.

Much of the conductor’s activity revolves around the  historically informed performance. Highlights include his debut with Collegium Vocale Gent and Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin at Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, and with Concerto Köln, as well as appearances with B’Rock Orchestra, Vocalconsort Berlin, Concerto Copenhagen, Wroclaw Baroque Orchestra, {oh!} Orchestra, Australian Haydn Ensemble and The Hanover Band.

International festival engagements include the Edinburgh International Festival, Savonlinna Opera Festival, Young Euro Classic in Berlin, International Chopin and his Europe Festival and Mozart Festival in Warsaw. Upcoming events on the artist’s calendar include performances with the Australia’s major orchestras, the Wrocław Baroque Orchestra, Sinfonieorchester Aachen and the Orfeo Orchestra in Budapest.

 

[2024]