Jump to content

GAIA Music Festival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from GAIA Chamber Music Festival)

Audience response at GAIA

The GAIA Music Festival was founded by violinist Gwendolyn Masin. The festival is hosted annually, usually in the month of May, in Oberhofen and Hilterfingen, as well as the cities of Thun and Berne. The Festival is non-profit. From 2010 until 2014, the Patron of the Festival was David Zinman.

History

[edit]

First hosted in Stuttgart under a different name, the GAIA Chamber Music Festival was founded in 2006. In 2009, the festival made its debut in Switzerland and was honoured with the Göppinger Kulturpreis [1] - a prize awarded for outstanding and innovative voluntary cultural work. In 2014, the Festival was renamed to the GAIA Music Festival.

Gwendolyn Masin, István Várdai, Balint Zsoldos during a concert at the 2014 edition of GAIA

Musicians

[edit]

Each year, artists from all over the globe spend just over a week living, working and collaborating together in Thun. Rehearsals are open to the public.

[edit]

Violin: Gabriel Adorján, Anke Dill, Ilya Hoffmann, Esther Hoppe, Yura Lee, Gwendolyn Masin, Ronald Masin, Lena Neudauer, Sergey Ostrovsky, Rosanne Philippens, Rahel Rilling, Svetlin Roussev, Tatiana Samouil, Lisa Schatzman, Alexander Sitkovetsky, Jan Talich, Kirill Troussov, Isabelle van Keulen

Viola: Tomoko Akasaka, Alessandro D'Amico, Guy Ben-Ziony,[2] Gérard Caussé, Isabel Charisius, Blythe Teh Engstroem, Jan Gruening, Lilli Maijala, Lars Anders Tomter, Dana Zemtsov

Cello: Dávid Adorján, Claudio Bohórquez, Alexander Chaushian, Nathalie Clein, Christoph Croisé, Thomas Demenga, Chiara Enderle, Andreas Fleck, Pavel Gomziakov, Louise Hopkins, Guy Johnston, Aleksei Kiseliov, Dóra Kokas, Gavriel Lipkind, Rafael Rosenfeld, Timora Rosler,[3] Martti Rousi, Jakob Spahn, Torleif Thedéen, István Várdai,[4] Quirine Viersen

Cimbalom: Miklós Lukács[5]

Harpsichord: Vital Julian Frey, Sebastian Wienand

Contrabass: James Oesi, Lars Schaper

Flute: Janne Thomsen, Kaspar Zehnder, Jacques Zoon

French Horn: Hervé Joulain

Clarinet: Reto Bieri, Don Li, Christoffer Sundqvist, Yevgeny Yehudin[6]

Bassoon: Martin Kuuskmann, Rui Lopes

Saxophone: Daniel Schnyder

Piano: Julia Bartha,[7] Alasdair Beatson, Simon Bucher, Finghin Collins, Peter Frankl, José Gallardo, Diana Ketler, Robert Kulek, Alexander Lonquich, Aleksandar Madzar, Vincenzo Maltempo, Hannes Minnaar, Pascal Rogé, Marianna Shirinyan, Cédric Pescia, Jan Philip Schulze, Dobrinka Tabakova, Roman Zaslavsky,[8] Bálint Zsoldos

Mezzo Sopran: Jordanka Milkova, Stephanie Szanto

Harp: Sarah Christ, Jana Boušková

Percussion: Matthias Eser, Pavel Bialiayeu, Andrei Pushkarev

Ensembles: Ariel Quartet, Aviv Quartet, Grazioso Chamber Orchestra of the Hungarian National Philharmonic, Merel Quartet, Melisma Saxophone Quartet, ORIGIN Ensemble, Young European Strings Chamber Orchestra, Yurodny

Premieres

[edit]

In 2009 works by Don Li, performed by the composer with Ania Losinger, Matthias Eser, and the Tonus String Quartet were introduced to the public. The arrangement of Johan Halvorsen's "Passacaglia" - especially written for the GAIA Music Festival - received its world premiere.

In 2010, Jorge Bosso’s "Moshee" for cello and strings enjoyed its world premiere and works by Max Bruch, Johann Sebastian Bach, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Johan Halvorsen and Robert Schumann – including the first piano quartet by the latter – were given their debut performance in Switzerland.

Compositions or transcriptions of works by Kurt Atterberg, Alban Berg, Ernest Bloch and Cesar Viana were premiered in 2011.

In 2012, transcriptions of works by Johann Sebastian Bach received premieres.

2013, the fifth birthday of GAIA in Thun, saw a celebration of new works and transcriptions played for the first time by composers such as Luigi Boccherini, Arcangelo Corelli, Astor Piazzolla, Andrei Pushkarev, Franz Schubert, and by the group Yurodny.

In 2014, Bagatelle of Benjamin Britten for violin, viola and piano and works by Paul Juon received their Swiss premier.

Daniel Schnyder was Composer-in-Residence in 2015. Among the many works of his that were played during the Festival, his "Mensch Blue" had its debut performance and "Ad Parnassum" its first performance in Switzerland.

2016 saw the first inclusion of premieres of works of literature, as well as music. Lukas Hartmann wrote texts to Telemann’s "Burlesque de Quixotte"; Stravinsky’s "Suite italienne" as well as Mussorgsky’s "Pictures at an Exhibition". The latter also received its Swiss premiere in a version for string quintet and piano.[9] Further works to receive international premieres were by Camille Saint-Saëns and Manuel de Falla, in arrangements written by Raymond Deane for Gwendolyn Masin's ORIGIN.

The festival programme of 2017 also included several world premieres. Massimo Pinca's "The Fates" for String Quartet and Cimbalom, OLUM by Marco Antonio Perez-Ramirez, "Bartók-Impressions" (after the "Romanian Folk Dances Sz. 68" by Béla Bartók) by Miklós Lukács, as well as Maximilian Grossenbacher's "Airreel" received their world premieres. The Swiss premiere of Rebecca Clarke's "Grotesque" also took place.[10][11]

The programme of the tenth GAIA Festival saw three world premieres in 2018: "Andante für einen Oberhofer Purzelbaum" and "Bourlesque" by Thomas Fortmann and the "Hungarian-Jewish Melodies" by Raymond Deane.

Thomas Fortmann dedicated his "Dreisamkeit" for mezzo soprano, clarinet and double bass to the 11th edition of GAIA Music Festival, which also received its world premiere at the festival in 2019. Dobrinka Tabakova performed her "Whispered Lullaby" together with Gwendolyn Masin in the Swiss premiere of the work for violin and piano.

Masterclasses

[edit]

In 2010 and 2011 the festival held masterclasses called GAIA Masters. The faculty included Shmuel Ashkenasi, Igor Ozim, Wonji Kim, Philippe Graffin, Vladimir Mendelssohn, Gerard Caussé, Frans Helmerson, Philippe Muller.

The musicians of the 11th edition of the GAIA Music Festival, Oberhofen

Artistic Director

[edit]

Artistic director and founder of the GAIA Music Festival is violinist Gwendolyn Masin.

Discography

[edit]
  • GAIA Music Festival 2009: Music of Brahms, Dvorák & Prokofiev
  • GAIA Music Festival 2010: Music of Atterberg, Bruch, Schumann & Weiner
  • GAIA Music Festival 2011: Music of Berg, Bloch, Debussy, Ligeti & Webern
  • GAIA Music Festival 2012: Music of Krenek & Webern
  • GAIA Music Festival 2013: Music of Hiller & Piazzolla
  • GAIA Music Festival 2014: Music of Bridge & Britten
  • GAIA Music Festival 2015: Music of De Falla, Medtner & Schnyder
  • GAIA Music Festival 2016: Music of Beethoven, Mussorgsky, Popper & Stravinsky
  • GAIA Music Festival 2017: Music of Liszt, Beethoven & Ravel
  • GAIA Music Festival 2018: Music of Deane, de Falla, Fortmann & Mozart
  • GAIA Music Festival 2019: Music of Bartók, Brahms, von Herzogenberg & Schumann

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2014-09-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Guy Ben-Ziony
  3. ^ Timora Rosler
  4. ^ "István Várdai receives 'Du Pré-Harrell' Stradivarius cello on extended loan". The Strad. 13 December 2016. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  5. ^ Miklós Lukács
  6. ^ "Yevgeny Yehudin". Archived from the original on 23 January 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  7. ^ Julia Bartha
  8. ^ Roman Zaslavsky
  9. ^ "GAIA Musikfestival: Musik und Wort - Im Konzertsaal - SRF".
  10. ^ "Programme & Tickets". 31 July 2021. Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
  11. ^ "Musikalische Reise in magische Sphären". Berner Zeitung.
[edit]