Upcoming Performances

Nov6
Shostakovich: Violin Concerto No. 1, Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring

Théâtre des Champs-Elysées

Paris, France

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975)
Violin Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 77 (1947–1948)

 

Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971)
The Rite of Spring (Le Sacre du printemps), ballet (1913)

 

Utopia Orchestra
Daniel Lozakovich — Violin
Teodor Currentzis — Conductor

 

The new programme of the Utopia Orchestra conducted by Teodor Currentzis, with violinist Daniel Lozakovich, brings together music by Dmitri Shostakovich and Igor Stravinsky.

 

Shostakovich’s Violin Concerto No. 1 was largely completed before 1948 and finalized during the state campaign against “formalist” composers. The work could only be premiered in 1955, amid a gradual cultural thaw. It would be reductive to interpret the concerto solely as a reaction to the stifling climate of late Stalinism; however, it unmistakably conveys pain, anger, sarcasm, and a gesture of withdrawal into an imagined inner refuge. The expansive four-movement cycle — a meditative Nocturne; a demonic Scherzo; a Passacaglia built on a sustained bass in neo-Baroque form; and a Burlesque finale — unfolds in a language marked by Shostakovich’s signature cool, brittle lyricism and dark grotesquerie.

 

Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring is arguably the most influential musical score of the first half of the twentieth century, unmatched in the radical consistency of its innovations. Conceived as a ballet built on an imagined vision of a prehistoric Slavic ritual, it culminates in a sacrificial dance preceding a human offering. The work avoids conventional musical narrative in favor of a constructivist building principle, resulting in machine-like rigor combined with raw, elemental force. In The Rite of Spring, industrial sonorities converge with an avant-garde idiom and archaic, “pre-civilizational” energy. The work’s imagery reflects “Scythianism,” an early twentieth-century current in Russian philosophy that imagined renewal through catastrophe, driven by the rise of a barbaric force from “the East.” Over a century since the famously disastrous 1913 premiere of the ballet, its rhythmic ingenuity remains sensational: asymmetrical accents, layered ostinati, and percussive orchestration generate an overwhelming physical impact.

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