Bangkok Post

Czech music in the spotlight

- Visit www.bangkoksym­phony.org or call 02-255-6617/8. Charles Olivieri-Munroe.

Canadian conductor Charles Olivieri-Munroe will be back to direct Bangkok Symphony Orchestra in an evening of nationalis­tic Czech music with Japanese violinist Kyoko Yonemoto as guest soloist at Thailand Cultural Centre, Ratchadaph­isek Road, on July 24 at 8pm.

Entitled “Kyoko Yonemoto Plays Dvorak”, the concert will open with Bedrich Smetana’s The Secret Overture, followed by Antonin Dvorak’s Violin Concerto in A Minor Op 53. Smetana’s String Quartet No.1 in E Minor, entitled From My Life, will then be performed in George Szell’s lush arrangemen­t for full orchestra, amounting to a work of Romantic symphonic proportion­s.

Kyoko was t he youngest ever prize-winner at the Paganini Competitio­n in Genoa, Italy, at the age of 13. She won prizes at the Queen Elizabeth, Fritz Kreisler, and Long-Thibaud competitio­ns, as well as the first prize in both Japan’s national competitio­n in 2001 and Moscow’s Paganini competitio­n in 2006. In 2009, she returned to perform Paganini’s famous first Violin Concerto and Vieuxtemps’ challengin­g Concerto No.4 with the Moscow State Symphony Orchestra.

She studied with paedagogue Boris Belkin at the Maastricht Conservato­rium in the Netherland­s, obtaining her Master’s degree in 2012 and has subsequent­ly served herself as professor of violin on the faculty.

Charles has already given two very well-received concerts with the BSO last year and this time he has programmed one of his favourite specialist areas of the repertoire namely Czech nationalis­tic music. He is artistic director and principal conductor of the Krakow Philharmon­ic Orchestra.

Tickets cost 400, 800, 1,200, 1,600 and 2,000 baht and can be purchased from Thai Ticket Major (visit www. thaiticket­major.com or call 02-262-3456) and BSO office.

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 ??  ?? Kyoko Yonemoto.
Kyoko Yonemoto.

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