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Concordia

Thu 10/10/2024 19:00 - 21:00
6.50€
49.50€

Esittely

Ava Bahari’s path has taken her from Suzuki lessons to international competition success. Moussa’s symphony is being performed for the first time in Finland.

Four soft beats of the timpani invite the listener to take part in Beethoven’s violin concerto. The soloist is the brilliant Swedish violinist Ava Bahari, whose path has taken her from Suzuki lessons to solo performances with the world's top orchestras. 

When Montreal turned 375, it received its own symphony from composer Samy Moussa. The city’s motto ‘Concordia salus’ contains the idea of salvation through harmony. 

Ludwig van Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 61

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827) wrote his only violin concerto at considerable speed in 1806 for the Austrian virtuoso Franz Clement. He completed the score only two days before the premiere in Vienna, so the soloist had to sight read it. Judging from the reviews, Clement improvised between the movements, and also played a piece of his own holding his violin upside down. One critic wrote: “As regards Beethoven’s concerto, the verdict of the experts is unanimous; while they acknowledge that it contains some fine things, they agree that the continuity often seems to be completely disrupted, and that the endless repetition of a few commonplace passages could easily prove wearisome.” The second performance was not until 1844. This time the soloist was the young Joseph Joachim, and the concerto has since become one of the cornerstones of the violin concerto repertoire. The solo part is far from easy, yet it is melodic and warmly appealing rather than excessively virtuosic. Beethoven did not himself provide a cadenza.

Christian Holmqvist

Samy Moussa: Symphony No. 1 “Concordia”

Says HPO Composer-in-Residence Samy Moussa (b. 1984):

“Concordia refers to the motto of Montreal, Concordia salus”, which in English means wellbeing through harmony”. Harmony, the union of hearts, a metaphor for the orchestra and for music, seemed like a good adjective to describe this composition. I wanted all four movements to be very different but unified by neighbouring harmonic processes and a fairly noble expression. The first movement, long and slow, requires only woodwind, strings and timpani; this gives it a homogenous sound that directs listening towards the harmony and lines rather than the orchestration. The second movement is a complete contrast with the entrance of percussion, piano and harp. With regard to time, there is an ambivalence between musical time without any rhythm punctuated with outbursts and lively, rhythmic moments. The third (and longest) movement, Nocturne, is at the heart of the piece; it is slow and solemn. The fourth and final movement follows the others attacca towards a fast-paced music where melodies are put on top of each other over and over until an explosion and a pause in time, to later rediscover a new kind of excitement that culminates in a bold and conclusive ending.”

Ava Bahari

Violinist Ava Bahari (born 1996 in Sweden) is Artist in Residence with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra in the 2024–2025 season.

Bahari has performed with renowned orchestras internationally and collaborated with conductors such as Ryan Bancroft, Pekka Kuusisto, and Santtu-Matias Rouvali. She has given recitals in Germany, Italy, and South Korea, and is a keen chamber musician. In 2024–2025, Bahari will perform as a soloist with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, the Philharmonia Orchestra, the Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, and the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra.

Pekka Kuusisto

Pekka Kuusisto (b. 1976) is one of Finland’s most renowned musicians. At the commencement of the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra’s 2024/25 concert season, Kuusisto began his second year as Principal Guest Conductor. Additionally, as Co-Artistic director, he is a member of the Artistic Leadership Team responsible for planning the programme. As he states, 'We offer both long perspectives and flashes of inspiration, both safety and fun.' In the HPO’s concerts, Pekka Kuusisto will perform as a soloist, conductor, and also as a player-director at the front of the orchestra with his violin.

Pekka Kuusisto’s career as a solo artist took off in 1995 when he won the International Jean Sibelius Violin Competition at the age of 19. Since then, he has toured concert halls around the world. Kuusisto’s repertoire spans classical music to modern experiments. He improvises and composes, readily intertwining music with other art forms, aiming to make concerts more accessible and engaging for the audience.

In addition to Helsinki, he frequents Oslo (Norwegian Chamber Orchestra), Bremen (Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie), and San Francisco (San Francisco Symphony).

Violin 1
Pekka Kauppinen
Kreeta-Julia Heikkilä
Eija Hartikainen
Katariina Jämsä
Kati Kuusava
Helmi Kuusi
Elina Lehto
Jani Lehtonen
Kari Olamaa
Petri Päivärinne
Kalinka Pirinen
Harry Rayner
Angeles Salas Salas
Satu Savioja
Elina Viitasaari
Alexis Mauritz

Violin 2
Kamran Omarli
Teija Kivinen
Teppo Ali-Mattila
Eva Ballaz
Heini Eklund
Dhyani Gylling
Matilda Haavisto
Anna-Maria Huohvanainen
Siiri Rasta
Serguei Gonzalez Pavlova
Kaija Lukas
Aino Szalai
Violetta Varo

Viola
Atte Kilpeläinen
Torsten Tiebout
Lotta Poijärvi
Petteri Poijärvi
Tuomas Huttunen
Kaarina Ikonen
Ulla Knuuttila
Mariette Reefman
Markus Sallinen
Hajnalka Standi-Pulakka
Maarit Holkko
Tuukka Susiluoto

Cello
Tuomas Ylinen
Beata Antikainen
Jaakko Rajamäki
Jaani Helander
Veli-Matti Iljin
Ilmo Saaristo
Saara Särkimäki
Johannes Välja
Tommi Wesslund
Arthur Daems

Bass
Ville Väätäinen
Eero Ignatius
Venla Lahti
Tomi Laitamäki
Josh Lambert
Adrian Rigopulos
Henri Dunderfelt
Miranda Erlich
Flute
Päivi Korhonen
Jenny Villanen
Saara Lehtinen

Oboe
Hannu Perttilä
Jussi Jaatinen
Nils Rõõmussaar

Clarinet
Anna-Maija Korsimaa
Heikki Nikula
Niina Selin

Bassoon
Markus Tuukkanen
Marcus Bottet
Tuukka Vihtkari

Horn
Ville Hiilivirta
Mika Paajanen
Joonas Seppelin
Ida Holm Olaussen

Trumpet
Thomas Bugnot
Michael Olsen
Mika Tuomisalo

Trombone
Valtteri Malmivirta
Anu Fagerström
Joni Taskinen

Tuba
Ilkka Marttila

Timpani
Tomi Wikström

Percussion
Xavi Castelló Aràndiga
Pasi Suomalainen
Pietari Huhtinen
Veli-Heikki Parviainen

Harp
Anni Kuusimäki
Minnaleena Jankko

Keyboard
Anna Kuvaja
Ville Urponen

Taiteilijat

Pekka Kuusisto
conductor
Ava Bahari
violin

Ohjelma

    19:00
    Ludwig van Beethoven
    Violin Concerto D major
    21:00
    Samy Moussa
    Symphony No. 1 "Concordia" (first performance in Finland)
Series II
Musiikkitalo Concert Hall
Pekka Kuusisto
Ava Bahari
Ludwig van Beethoven
Violin Concerto D major
Samy Moussa
Symphony No. 1 "Concordia" (first performance in Finland)