Tchaikovsky’s Little Russian

Thu 18 Jun 2009 7:30pm at Symphony Hall

Toby Spence credit Mitch Jenkins

Toby Spence credit Mitch Jenkins

After Hamlet in November, Andris Nelsons offers us another of Tchaikovsky’s responses to Shakespeare, a passionate fantasy overture based on the kind of story of doomed love to which the composer was naturally drawn. But Tchaikovsky is not always doom and gloom, and his Second Symphony uses folk music to create a tuneful work of great charm. Britten, a more openly gay composer than Tchaikovsky, nevertheless suffered his own share of inner torment – but in his Serenade we hear his acutely sympathetic response to great English poems from across the ages.

6.15pm Pre-concert talk – The Little Russian
Roderic Dunnett of The Independent gives a user’s guide to Tchaikovsky’s Second Symphony

£9.50, £13.50, £17.50, £21.50, £24, £28, £32

Andris Nelsons – conductor
Elspeth Dutch – horn
Toby Spence – tenor
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet 21’
Britten: Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings 26’
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 2 (Little Russian) 33’

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