Thursday Concert - More Than One Strauss Filharmonia Narodowa

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Thursday Concert - More Than One Strauss
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, photo: Grzesiek Mart

Love, money and the power of destiny – that is how Arabella can be summarised in a nutshell. The opera centres on the titular character, the daughter of a count who has fallen into financial difficulties. The family hopes that she will solve the problem by marrying into wealth. However, she refuses to make any sensible concessions. She has no shortage of suitors, but she wants to find love on her own terms. So she rejects both elderly rich men and young bachelors, including Matteo, who loses his will to live as a result. He is saved from tragedy by Zdenka, his beloved’s sister, dressed up as a boy. She even delivers letters supposedly from Arabella, which Zdenka writes herself, forging her sister’s handwriting. Meanwhile, the bankrupt count conducts his own search for a husband for his unruly daughter, even sending an ‘offer’ to old Mandryka. Finally, a response arrives: Mandryka Junior, heir to his late uncle’s estate, appears at the door. He claims that he has already fallen in love with Arabella and immediately shares his cash with the count. Arabella happens to be in a meeting with the elderly aristocrat Elemer, but her thoughts revolve only around the mysterious figure she has been bumping into all day (‘Mein Elemer!’)… At a ball organised shortly afterwards, she learns that it was Mandryka. He is the man of her dreams! The young couple confess their love for each other (‘Sie woll'n mich heireten’) and promise to get engaged according to the tradition of the young man’s homeland, with the woman offering her future husband a glass of water from her father’s house. For now, however, the lovers part ways, and Matteo and Zdenka appear. Zdenka hands the tormented man an envelope to cheer him up, saying that it contains the key to Arabella’s room. Mandryka overhears this and, convinced of betrayal, dismisses his feelings. Meanwhile, Matteo spent the night with… Zdenka, whom, divested of her boyish clothes, he mistook for Arabella. When the intrigue comes to light, Mandryka begs his beloved for forgiveness, but she remains unmoved. However, she immediately appears with a glass of water in her hand (‘Das war sehr gut, Mandryka’)…

As Richard Strauss set the action of Arabella in dance-crazy Vienna in 1860, a city where the carnival season does not end with Lent, the waltz An der schönen blauen Donau by another Strauss – Johann II, from 1867 – seems the perfect conclusion to this operatic concert. However, before we reach the capital, we will be stopped by Karl Goldmark's Symphony No. 1 ‘Rustic Wedding’. Its idyllic Wedding Song, imitating folk music, Serenade and Dance, peppered with rustic humour, give an insight into what was happening in the countryside near Vienna at that time.


Piotr Mika (Ruch Muzyczny)

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Christoph König

Chief Conductor, Spanish Radio Symphony Orchestra (RTVE)
Principal Guest Conductor, Warsaw Philharmonic
Music & Artistic Director, Solistes Europeens Luxembourg

 

Renowned for the clarity, elegance and precision of his interpretations, Christoph König is acclaimed and in demand internationally as one of the leading conductors of his generation. Chief Conductor of the Orquesta Sinfónica de Radio Televisión Española (RTVE) in Madrid since the 2023/2024 season, he is music and artistic director of the Solistes Européens Luxembourg since 2010. With the start of 2024/2025 season, he assumed the position of Principal Guest Conductor of the Warsaw Philharmonic for three consecutive seasons.

Past and future highlights include appearances with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Staatskapelle Dresden, Orchestre de Paris, Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, Wiener Concert-Verein, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Danish National Symphony Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Mozarteumorchester Salzburg, Beethoven Orchester Bonn, Dresdner Philharmonie, Stuttgarter Philharmoniker, New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra. In North America, he has performed with orchestras such as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, New Jersey Symphony, Houston Symphony, Oregon Symphony, Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra and Toronto Symphony Orchestra. Equally at home in the opera repertoire, he has conducted several productions at major opera houses such as Opernhaus Zürich, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Theater Bonn, Semperoper Dresden, Staatsoper Stuttgart and Teatro Real in Madrid.

In the years 2009–2014, Christoph König was Principal Conductor of the Orquestra Sinfónica do Porto Casa da Música, with which he toured extensively in Europe and Brazil. From 2003 to 2006, he served as Principal Conductor of Malmö Symphony Orchestra, as well as Principal Guest Conductor of the Orquesta Filarmónica de Gran Canaria.

His recording of the complete Beethoven symphonies with Solistes Européens Luxembourg (2020) is the highlight of his collaboration with the British label Rubicon. Also, on the same label he released interestingly juxtaposed repertoire by Antonín Dvořák, Aaron Copland and Charles Ives, Franz Schubert and Luciano Berio, as well as Étienne Méhul and Ludwig van Beethoven. His projects with Naxos have included music by the French composer Louise Farrenc and living composers from Luxembourg. In addition, his discography includes Henryk Melcer’s piano concertos with the BBC Scottish Symphony (on Hyperion), Beethoven’s Symphonies with Malmö Symphony Orchestra (on dB Productions) and Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 1 with BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra (BBC Music).

Christoph König was born in Dresden, where he sang in the famous Kreuzchoir. He studied conducting, piano and singing at the Hochschule für Musik Dresden and furthered his studies in masterclasses with Sergiu Celibidache and Sir Colin Davis, whose assistant he later became at the Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden at the Semperoper.
 

[2025]

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