Romania Resurgent: The 19th 'George Enescuâ International Festival and Competition
2009-06-09 19:11:25 -
Doors previously closed to the world were swiftly unbarred following the Romanian Revolution almost two decades ago. One of Central Europeâs great cultural centres, Bucharest, certainly gained a new lease on life. The cityâs âGeorge Enescuâ International Festival and Competition became a leading player in Romaniaâs resurgence in the years following the overthrow of Nicolae CeauĆescuâs despotic regime. It shines today as a beacon of excellence among international festivals, distinguished by a programme blend of superb Romanian musicians and outstanding visiting orchestras, ensembles and artists. With the prospect of early autumn sunshine, an unbeatable local atmosphere and more than 100 concerts, recitals and opera performances, Bucharest is undoubtedly the top destination for music lovers this September. Bucharest, 30th August â 26th September 2009: âThe mighty Salzburg Festival now has a rivalâ â The Guardian
The Festival, launched in 1958 to honour Romaniaâs greatest composer, continues to serve George Enescuâs memory and foster his legacy as creative artist, performer and inspirational teacher. The Guardianâs Salzburg Festival comparison, printed as a bold headline during the biennial âGeorge Enescuâ
Festivalâs 18th edition in September 2007, certainly bears close inspection. The 19th Festivalâs programme would grace any international festival. Devised under the honorary presidency and artistic directorship of Ioan Hollender, director of the Vienna State Opera, its contents speak of serious artistic quality and repertoire depth.
This yearâs Festival opens on 30 August with the first of two stagings of Enescuâs operatic masterpiece, OEDIPE, produced by Bucharest National Opera and conducted by Oleg Caetani. The fine cast is led by Franck Ferrari, whose title-role performance harvested critical superlatives after the co-productionâs presentation last October at the Théùtre du Capitole de Toulouse.
Other glittering highlights include a performance of Brucknerâs Ninth Symphony with the George Enescu Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Maxim Vengerov, two concerts of works by Enescu, Debussy, Schumann and Shostakovich from the Philharmonia Orchestra under Vladimir Ashkenazy, and a fascinating pairing of Enescuâs Third Suite with Berliozâs SYMPHONIE FANTASTIQUE performed by the Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse and its exciting young principal guest conductor, Tugan Sokhiev. Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven are on the bill for two concerts given by the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, with Murray Perahia as soloist and conductor.
The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and Mariss Jansons are also set to perform two programmes, opening their âGeorge Enescuâ International Festival account with Beethovenâs âEroicaâ and exploring works by Weber, Haydn and DvoĆĂĄk in their second concert. HĂ©lĂšne Grimaud is soloist in Rachmaninovâs Piano Concerto No.2 with the St Petersburg Philharmonic and Yuri Temirkanov in the second of the orchestraâs two concerts. Maestro Jansons, meanwhile, returns to conduct Beethovenâs Seventh Symphony and the âPrelude and Liebestodâ from Wagnerâs TRISTAN und ISOLDE with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. The Swingle Singers turn their vocal expertise to Berioâs SINFONIA for a performance with the Romanian National Radio Orchestra conducted by Asher Fisch.
Concerts from the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra with Charles Dutoit and Martha Argerich, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande under Marek Janowski, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and Dmitri Kitaenko, and the Orchestra of the Maggio Musicale, Florence, under Roberto Abbadoâs direction further underline the range and class of the Festivalâs orchestral programme. The roster of soloists is equally impressive, with Joshua Bell, Nelson Freire, Lynne Harrell, Daniel Hope, John Lill, Yo-Yo Ma, Mischa Maisky, Maria JoĂŁo Pires, and Jean-Yves Thibaudet among featured artists.
Devotees of historically informed performance are also strikingly well served by the Festival. THE CREATION will be given in the neo-baroque splendour of Bucharestâs Atheneum by Les Musiciens du Louvre and Marc Minkoswki to mark Haydnâs bicentenary year, while soprano Kate Royal, Les Arts Florissants and William Christie commemorate the 250th anniversary of Handelâs death with a performance of his oratorio SUSANNA
A further 36 concerts will take place outside Bucharest, in the cities of BraĆov, Cluj, IaĆi, Sibiu and TimiĆoara, the outcome of an idea conceived in 1998 by former artistic director Lawrence Foster to broaden the Festivalâs reach within Romania.
In short, the âGeorge Enescuâ International Festival and its highly regarded Competition are events of global significance. âBetween 1958 and 1970, the Festival attracted so many important musicians,â recalls its Manager, Mihai Constantinescu. âKarajan, Menuhin, Rubinstein, Sir John Barbirolli, David Oistrakh and many others came here then.â The Festival, reinstated after the revolution in 1991, overcame challenges set by Romaniaâs transition to a market economy and progressed to enjoy a period of unprecedented growth. Since 2001 it has attracted heavy investment from the Romanian government, together with support from CNN and other multinational media partners, and sponsorship from such global companies as Mercedes Benz and Hewlett Packard, Unicredit and ING. In 2007, five performances at Bucharestâs monumental 4,100-seat Palace Hall Sala Mare attracted capacity audiences, as did many Festival events presented elsewhere.
The organisers are expecting to beat all box-office records this year and boost the Festivalâs international profile. âItâs a big thing for Romania to invite 13 symphony orchestras, five chamber orchestras and great artists from around the world,â he observesâ I think our politicians realise how important the Festival is abroad; they know it is a global event. Multinational companies are coming to us from edition to edition, sponsoring the Festival, which is so important for the whole country.â To be regarded as a rival to the Salzburg Summer Festival clearly matters to Constantinecu and his Enescu Festival colleagues. âThis view is very important to us,â he says. âOf course, they have a longer season and more concerts. But in terms of the important orchestras and artists coming to our Festival, it is a very accurate comparison.â
In addition to its central commitment to the work of George Enescu, the Festival also provides an unmatched service for the promotion of young Romanian composers and performers. The Romanian Composersâ Union, a key partner since the Festivalâs foundation, has been closely involved with shaping this yearâs Romanian Contemporary Music series. Meanwhile, the related Enescu and His Contemporaries strand amounts to a festival within a festival, including beguiling programmes from the Nash Ensemble, the Keller Quartet, Cedrik Tibergien, Ilya Gringolts, Eugene Urgorski and Konstantin Lifschitz.
âIt was the idea of the original Festival to promote Enescu and also Romanian contemporary composers,â notes Ioan Holender â the director of the Wiener Staatsoper and artistic director of the Festival. âWe are determined to keep this idea alive in order to promote Romanian culture. We have to show the real image of Romania, because our country is so often misrepresented abroad. We have a rich culture and history; weâre genuine Europeans, at the heart of Europe. Enescu is recognised as an international figure, but I now want the entire Festival to be presented to the world as the true image of todayâs Romania.â
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