Guitar World – Global Guitar Ismo Eskelinen: India and China 19.3.2016

Sat 19.3.2016 at 19:00
Verkatehdas, Hämeenlinna

Ismo Eskelinen, guitar
Ghatam
Karthick, ghatam
Chamber Orchestra Avanti!

Miguel De Fuenllana: Three fantasiaa
Alberto Ginastera: Sonata op. 47
Tan Dun: Concerto for Six, ekS
Subramaniam Karthick (sov. Eero Hämeenniemi): Friend of the listener (Rasikapriya)
Eero Hämeenniemi: Wood and Clay, Teos for guitar and ghatami, Wed.

Guitarist Ismo Eskelinen’s “World of Guitar – Global Guitar” concert at Verkatehta features the harmonic and precise polyphony of Western music meets the improvisational virtuosity of Asian music. From the Renaissance to India and China, Avant will be joined by Indian percussion guru Ghatam Karthick. Eero Hämeenniemi’s work for guitar and ghatam will be premiered and Tan Dun’s Concerto for Six will have its Finnish premiere.

 

For more information and tickets: http://www.verkatehdas.fi/tapahtumat/324

Composer portraits no. 9 SHH! or BEING DIVINE – Impressions of Jean Sibelius 12.-15.11.2015

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Alexander Theatre
Nov, 12 at 19.00
Nov, 14 at 19.00
Nov, 15 at 16.00

Avanti! chamber orchestra
Juha Siltanen, script & stage direction
Leena Nuora, actress
Jaana Pesonen, actress
Mervi Takatalo, actress
Janne Nisonen, conductor
Monica Groop, mezzo-soprano
Jouko Laivuori, piano

Kaisa Salmi, lighting and stage design
Tuomas Lampinen, costume design
Juhani Liimatainen, sound design

SHH! or being divine is a tragicomic spectacle about people and the “God” in the next room – a gently ironic portrait of Finland’s official genius.

And oh how Finnish he was, our Jean Sibelius: full of self-admiration and self-contempt, a premonition of death and omnipotence, sociability and an abnormal fear of people, always in crisis, always invulnerable, forever the repentant sinner yet in his own mind always “divine”. And modern, too – a bit like the nerd who escapes from reality, the lord of a fantasy world.

Jean Sibelius, aka Sibba, is also very much present in this the 150th year since his birth. Or has he really ventured to come along in person? And how did others feel about living in a house in which something mysteriously unique was always going on in one of the rooms? Three women in a portrait frame tiptoe silently, shhh, shhhh, through the room, laying the table, swatting at a fly, waiting for Something. Shadowing them, like ghosts, are many Avanti! combinations, in strains both foreseen and unforeseen.

Tickets 30€/20€ www.lippupalvelu.fi

Avanti! NJORD Festival 28-29 January 2016 (Copenhagen, Denmark)

Thu 28.1.2016 at 20:00
Dansehallerne, Store Scene

Chamber Orchestra Avanti!
La Chambre aux échos
Aleksi Barrière
, director
Clément Mao-Takacs, conductor

Kaija Saariaho: “La Passion de Simone”

Chamber Orchestra Avanti! and the French La Chambre aux échos perform a new chamber version of Kaija Saariaho’s “La Passion de Simone” oratorio in the opening concert of the NJORD Festival. This will be the first performance of the work in Denmark and the premiere of the new version. It will also mark Avant’s first performance in Denmark.

Kaija Saariaho will be a guest composer at the first NJORD Biennale.

 

Fri 29.1.2016 at 20:00
Dansehallerne, Store Scene

Chamber Orchestra Avanti!
Jakob Kullberg, cello
Clément Mao-Takacs, conductor

“LYSET, MØRKET OG FARVERNE”
Niilo Tarnanen: Suspension (2013)
Kaija Saariaho: Notes on Light (2006)
Hans Peter Stubbe Teglbjaerg: Stringed Spaces II (2016)
Kaija Saariaho: Arc (1986)

Friday evening’s concert will feature Danish cellist Jakob Kullberg as Avant’s soloist. In addition to Saariaho’s works, the programme includes Niilo Tarnanen’s Schwabe and the premiere of a work composed for this concert by the Danish composer Hans Peter Stubbe Teglbjaerg.

http://www.njordbiennale.com/da/

SCHH! or IHANA OLENTO – Impressions of Jean Sibelius 12.-15.11.2015

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Thu 12. and Sat 14.11. at 19:00, Sun 15.11. at 16:00
Alexander Theatre

Chamber Orchestra Avanti!
Juha Siltanen, script and direction
Jean Sibelius, music
Janne Nisonen, conductor
Monica Groop, vocals
Jouko Laivuori, piano
Leena Nuora, actress
Jaana Pesonen, actress
Mervi Takatalo, actress

Kaisa Salmi, lighting and set design
Tuomas Lampinen, costume design
Juhani Liimatainen, sound design

 

“Schh!” is a comic and tragic musical and dramatic work about humans and the “God” who creates in the next room – a tenderly ironic portrait of Jean Sibelius in 1927 and a high-water mark of egotism. Against his will and too early, in human terms, Sibelius became a symbol of Finland, but he really is Finnish: an egomaniac who fears nothingness to the point of death, for whom childish self-absorption is as natural as self-loathing, filled for almost a hundred years with both the incessant anticipation of death and rapture, sociability and human fear, always in crisis and always invulnerable, as incoherent as he is heavily present, a sinner forever repenting, always defining himself as “wonderful”.

Was it only fantasy that kept his persona in the joints? Sibba, an icon of Finnish creativity, is a strangely modern figure – a bit like a cyber-man escaping reality, king of the imaginary world, his mind present everywhere but never stuck. And that’s who we should all be now, creative dynamos and exports.

Even on his 150th anniversary, Sibelius is everywhere – to the point of exhaustion – as he was, according to the stories, in his own home: as if he were God, he must be taken into account at all times, things must happen on his terms, even if no one can be quite sure what he wants or whether he is even genuinely there. At the end of the festive season, the Avanti! orchestra does the master a favour, letting him slip away from his own portrait, back into hiding. We won’t bother him on stage.

But how does it feel to live in a house where something mysterious and unprecedented happens in one room, silently, for decades? At the edge of the spheres of music and silence, life, in all its “banality”, tries to go on. In place of the protagonist, three women move about without a murmur, setting the table, scaring the fly from buzzing and waiting for something, a bit like Samuel Beckett’s famous vagabonds in Godot. They are accompanied, as discreetly as possible, by the many ensembles of the Avanti! orchestra, playing the expected and the unexpected.

Composer Magnus Lindberg, by the way, once said it was embarrassing that dramas about composers never show what the composer does most of the time, composing, and added: “understandably so, because composing doesn’t look like anything.” The composer’s portrait this time is also a comment on this: it is a stage poem about absence, about what a “creative person” looks like “from the outside”. Let everyone learn a lesson.

“Now get it through your head that you – Ego – are a genius!” (Jean Sibelius in his youthful diary)

 

Duration of the performance approx. 2h, including intermission.

Tickets: €30 / €20, www.lippupalvelu.fi

 

MUSIC CHART – Compositions by Jean Sibelius

I SHOW

Capriccietto

Adagio d

“Ljunga Virginia”, part 2

“Ett ensamt skidspår”

Stage music “Ödlan”, scene 2

“La pompeuse marche d’Asis”

II THURSDAY

Drama music “Death”, part 1, Tempo di valse lente

Adagio “To my beloved Aino”

Drama music “Pelléas and Mélisande”, part 6, “De trenne blinda systrar”

Stage music “Storm”, part 23, “Rainbow” (soundtrack)

Stage music “Death”, part 5, Moderato

Capriccietto (Magnus Lindberg’s arrangement for small orchestra)

“sound forest” (sound track)

Andantino D “Till Emma-Kristina Marie-Louise Berndtson – Lulu”

RAHA concert 4.10.2015

Old Student House at 19:00

Avanti! Chamber Orchestra
Jaakko Kuusisto, conductor
Pasi Heikura, presenter
Essi Luttinen, vocals
Joonathan Roozeman, cello
Kampayhtye
Otaniemi Kaiku, led by Tapani Länsiö
Kaisaniemi Primary School Choir, conducted by Kirsi Pettinen
Programme design Kari Kriikku and Antti Häyrynen

Money won’t make you happy, but Avant’s Money Concert will!
The economy teaches the art of making the right decisions, and Avant does not take its time. Now even music is being sliced, diced and adjusted, because everything can be done more cheaply and efficiently. Savings measures are being tried at the Sibelius Andante festival, the Karelia series Alla Marcia and Finlandia. Public education will be cut, but Avanti will teach regardless of class size. It’s not just about musical belt-tightening, but about continuous growth and sustainable development.

The participants include Avanti!, Jaakko Kuusisto, Essi Luttinen, Jonathan Roozeman, Otaniemi Echo and the Kaisaniemi Primary School music class choir. Finns will be guided along the road by Jean Sibelius, Johann Strauss Jr, Anton Webern, Morton Feldman, Hans Eisler and the old school songs. Avanti will also present its own improvised vision of the government’s Vision of the Future “Finland 2025 – Built Together”.

Tickets 30 / 20 €, www.lippu.fi

 

 

PROGRAMME:

Hans Eisler: There’s Nothing Quite Like Money

Works by Jean Sibelius cut from the civil service, cheese-grated and drastically adapted
Andante festive
Alla marcia from the Karelia series
Finlandia

The economy of abstraction
Anton Webern: 3 pieces for cello and piano op 11
Ludwig van Beethoven: Turkish March
Johann Strauss jr. (arr. Anton Webern): Treasure Waltz

*interim*

Ludwig van Beethoven: The Ruins of Athens – Allegro

Frank Loesser: Brotherhood of Man, musikaalista How to succeed in business without really trying

Cheerful school songs
Schoolboy’s marching song / Skiers’ song / Forward a bunch of young people

“Finland 2025 built together” A vision of Finland’s future, improvisation from a government text

A dream of continued growth
Jay Schwartz: Music for Orchestra III

Gamballa to Karelia 17.9.

17.9. 19.00 Porvoo Cathedral

Tuuli Lindeberg, soprano
Jukka Rautasalo, gamba and baroque cello
Anthony Marini, gamba
Louna Hosia, gamba and horn
Ilkka Heinonen, violone and horn
Matias Häkkinen, harpsichord

Purcell: Songs and Fantasies
Orlando Gibbons: Fantasies
Piae Cantiones tunes
Olli Virtaperko: Suite for treble tambourine n.s.
Olli Virtaperko: “Invitation” for horn, cello and soprano

Avanti!n Gambayhty and a cousin from Karelia
The violin became the queen of stringed instruments in the late 17th century, brilliant in its devilish skill and a soulful interpreter of singing melodies. But there are notes that the violin cannot reach. The viola da gamba ensemble plays as softly as the midsummer night mist on an English moor. The music comes from centuries ago, an equal polyphony where no one leads and no one sings.

Finland also has a tradition of knee-held stringed instruments, like the gamba. The Finnish bowman sings the ancient undertone of the Ugrian subconscious. Its unadorned and spiritual voice of truth has grown directly out of nature and the silence that surrounded the ancient Finns. Chamber music in which the English tradition of the exalted consort meets the obscurity of the Finnish log cabin.

STEVE REICH 19.8.2015

Musiikkitalo, concert hall at 19:00

 

Composing legend Steve Reich himself will join Avant in a concert featuring Reich’s lesser-known early work Pendulum Music, his new work Radio Rewrite and other works that have become classics. The concert is a co-production with Helsinki Festival.

Avanti! and Colin Currie Group
Thomas Djupsjöbacka, conductor
Marzi Nyman, electric guitar soloist
Timo Kurkikangas, sound design

Tickets 27,50 – 63,50 €

 

Avanti! 2014-2015

What is the hardest currency for both creative and performing artists? It’s inventing. Coming up with a great idea. Finding your own thing, so to speak.

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