19 February 2025, 19.00-21.00
Solti Hall
Chamber Music, So Close
Noémi Győri, József Balog & Géza Röhrig Recital Presented by Liszt Academy
RADIX
Paul Ben-Haim: Három dal szöveg nélkül » 1. Arioso
Géza Röhrig: transz
Mieczysław Weinberg: Five Pieces for Flute and Piano » 1. Landschaft, 2. Erster Tanz
Géza Röhrig: oświęcim, danse macabre
Mieczysław Weinberg: Five Pieces for Flute and Piano » 3. Zweiter Tanz
Géza Röhrig: semmike hálás
Mieczysław Weinberg: Five Pieces for Flute and Piano » 4. Melodie, 5. Dritter Tanz
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Paul Ben-Haim: Three Songs Without Words » 2. Ballad
Géza Röhrig: fiú, semmikét örökbefogadják
Dick Kattenburg: Fuvola-zongora szonáta, op. 5 » 1. Introduzione, 2. Intermezzo
Röhrig Géza: anyák napi köszöntő
Dick Kattenburg: Sonata for Flute and Piano, op. 5 » 3. Fughetta
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Paul Ben-Haim: Three Songs Without Words » 3. Sephardic melody
Géza Röhrig: semmikét otthagyják
Erwin Schulhoff: Sonata for Flute and Piano » 1. Allegro moderato, 2. Scherzo. Allegro giocoso
Géza Röhrig: messiás
Erwin Schulhoff: Sonata for Flute and Piano» 3. Aria.Andante
Géza Röhrig: elateo
Erwin Schulhoff: Sonata for Flute and Piano » 4. Rondo-Finale. Allegro molto gajo
Noémi Győri (flute), József Balog (piano), Géza Röhrig (poem)
Noémi Győri lives in London, Géza Röhrig in New York. Noémi plays the flute, Géza writes. Two Hungarians on both sides of the Atlantic, with the pianist József Balog in Budapest. This evening brings them together, and with them the twins of sound: music and poetry. Noémi Győri and József Balog have selected pieces written between 1927 and 1952 by four prominent Jewish composers, Mieczysław Weinberg, Dick Kattenburg, Erwin Schulhoff and Paul Ben-Haim, which are so faithful to the past that they never for a moment become prisoners of it through their lyricism. Géza Röhrig’s poems sparkle between the commandments of ‘Tell it to your son’ and ‘Don't look back’ with a poignant personality. The Latin word for root is RADIX. Anyone who gets in touch with their roots is said to be radical. But today’s human being has a contact failure: the tunnels of the subway cut our roots, and the root of the geranium travelling with you in a spaceship grows upwards from the pot. In this one-off evening, three artists who rarely perform together bear witness to the fact that, although the root itself is invisible, we cannot see without it.
The event is the rescheduled date of the cancelled concert on 2 November, and tickets for the original concert are valid.
- 10% discount for 2 concerts,
- 15% discount for 3 concerts,
- 20% discount for 4 or more concerts.
Presented by
Liszt Academy Concert Centre
Tickets:
HUF 4 500