Anima Insight

Beethoven 7

Concerts

Date Time Location Country Project Tickets  
16-02-'24 Tax shelter premiere 14:30 Grand Théâtre de Provence, Aix-en-Provence France Tickets
Program
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827) - Symphonie Nr.7 in A Dur (1812) Harmonie für 9 Stimmen
17-02-'24 15:00 Grand Théâtre de Provence, Aix-en-Provence France Tickets
Program
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827) - Sonate Pathétique (1798) arr. anoniem (1810)
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827) - Symphonie Nr.7 in A Dur (1812) Harmonie für 9 Stimmen
18-02-'24 14:00 Academiezaal Sint-Truiden Belgium -
Program
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827) - Sonate Pathétique (1798) arr. anoniem (1810)
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827) - Symphonie Nr.7 in A Dur (1812) Harmonie für 9 Stimmen
Program

Ludwig van Beethoven – Sonate Pathétique (1798) arr. anonymous (1810)

Ludwig van Beethoven – Symphonie Nr.7 in A Dur (1812) Harmonie für 9 Stimmen

Played on German instruments from around 1800.

Muzikanten

Tatjana Zimre oboe, Stefaan Verdegem oboe, Diederik Ornée clarinet, Odilo Ettelt clarinet, Jane Gower bassoon, Kamila Marcinkowska-Prasa bassoon, Pierre-Antoine Tremblay horn, Martin Mürner horn, Antoine Pecqueur double bassoon

With Antoine Pecqueur (FR) and Olav Grondelaers (NL) as hosts.

Anima Insight : Beethoven 7

The musicians are in place. Music is playing. Business as usual. But what comes before the notes? In this new concert formula Anima Insight, Anima Eterna Brugge wishes to turn the spotlight on a few untold tales behind the score, between the notes, beneath the sounds. Wonderer Olav Grondelaers (Klara) speaks out and guides the listener inside the orchestra.  

Speaking to the audience might not be the easiest task for us, musicians, but I think it brings us closer to each other. – Kamila Marcinkowska-Prasad, bassoon.

For this concert the orchestra is reduced to an ensemble of nine wind instrumentalists who embark upon an arrangement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 “für Harmonie” (S.A. Steiner, 1816). In Beethoven’s time, orchestral works were regularly rearranged for “Harmonie”, an ensemble consisting of two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns and a contrabassoon. European princes and counts had their own harmony ensembles and arrangements allowed for wider distribution of the originally symphonic work. So there were both prestigious and commercial benefits to the practice. But who wrote the arrangement? What inspired Beethoven? What quests have the musicians undertaken to find historical instruments? What is the difference between a historical clarinet and the modern instrument? Olav Grondelaers expresses his curiosity out loud and leaves no consideration unturned. Questions, answers and short audio samples lead to new insights. After this the concert begins and the past unfolds, note by note: business as never before

Trailer Anima Insight

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