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Magdalena Kožená & Kirill Gerstein

Festival artist-in-residence Magdalena Kožená and Kirill Gerstein pay tribute to the gems of the art song repertoire.

Ticket prices:

2990-390 CZK

Date

7/9/2026

Time

8 pm

Doors Closed

7.55 pm

End of Concert

approx. 9.40 pm

Dress Code

dark suit

Programme Series

Artist-in-Residence
Dvořák Collection
Recital

Programme

Leoš Janáček
Moravian Folk Poetry in Songs (selection)
Antonín Dvořák
In Folk Tone, Op. 73, B. 146 (selection)
Antonín Dvořák
Evening Songs, Op. 3 and 31, B. 61 (selection)
Erwin Schulhoff
Folksongs and Dances from the Těšínsko Region, WV 120 (selection)
Sergei Rachmaninoff
Six Songs, Op. 38
Béla Bartók
Village Scenes, Sz. 78

Artists

Magdalena Kožená
Magdalena Kožená
mezzo-soprano

Magdalena Kožená is one of the most sought-after singers of our time. Her wide-ranging repertoire spans from Baroque music through works of the Classical and Romantic masters to 20th-century compositions. She studied singing at the Conservatory in Brno, her native city, and later with Eva Blahová at the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava. The most prominent of her many national and international competition successes was her first-place victory at the International Mozart Competition in Salzburg in 1995. During her prolific artistic career to date, she has appeared on many of the world’s leading concert stages and at renowned festivals and has performed numerous roles at celebrated opera houses including London’s Royal Opera House Covent Garden and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Her recordings for Deutsche Grammophon, EMI Classics, Linn Records and Pentatone have won her virtually every major award bestowed by music magazines, including prestigious Gramophone Awards in several categories.

Magdalena Kožená is not only an outstanding singer, but also a cultural ambassador for the Czech Republic. She actively promotes Czech music and its cultural heritage abroad, both in concert and through her recordings. Her repertoire includes a rich selection of songs by classic Czech composers, especially Antonín Dvořák, Leoš Janáček and Bohuslav Martinů, as well as works by Petr Eben and Jewish composers born in the Czech lands such as Erwin Schulhoff and Hans Krása. She also performs works from the Czech operatic repertoire, as evidenced by acclaimed recordings of Janáček’s Katya Kabanova and Bohuslav Martinů’s Julietta.

Magdalena Kožená is also dedicated to advocating for primary arts education in the Czech Republic. To this end, she founded a charitable foundation that e.g. organises the nationwide Art Schools Open Festival for young performers. She has received numerous prestigious honours for her diverse musical activities. She is a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of the French Republic and, in 2023, received the First-Class Medal of Merit in the Field of Art from the President of the Czech Republic. She has also been honoured with the Gratias Agit Award from the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs for promoting the country’s good name and the Gold Medal for Merit in the Arts from the Kennedy Center International Committee on the Arts in Washington, D.C. The city of Halle awarded her the Georg Friedrich Handel Prize, named after the city’s famous native. She holds an honorary doctorate from the Janáček Academy of Performing Arts. In 2025, Magdalena Kožená received the Antonín Dvořák Award in recognition of her outstanding contribution to Czech music and its international promotion.

source: C.E.M.A. – Central European Music Agency

photo © Julia Wesely

Kirill Gerstein
Kirill Gerstein
piano

Fascination for musical discovery combined with boundless curiosity, imagination, and virtuosity have established Kirill Gerstein as one of today’s most prolific and compelling performers. Gerstein is a searching artist. As a pianist, curator, educator, musical leader, and artistic collaborator, his exploration of resonant themes across a vast spectrum of repertoire – from Baroque suites and Classical concerti to contemporary creations, jazz, and cabaret – has nourished relationships with many of the world’s leading orchestras, conductors, instrumentalists, singers, composers, festivals, recording labels, and media platforms.

Highlights of the past season include Gerstein’s Carnegie Hall/Stern Auditorium solo recital debut, marking Ferruccio Busoni’s centenary with performances of his Piano Concerto with the Berliner Philharmoniker, the Orchestre National de France, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and the Gulbenkian Orchestra in Lisbon; Gershwin with the Staatskapelle Dresden on ZDF German national television’s traditional New Year’s Eve gala broadcast; the closing concert of the Musikfest Berlin performing Messiaen’s From the Canyons to the Stars with Sir Simon Rattle; the Berg Kammerkonzert with Ilya Gringolts, Heinz Holliger and Chamber Orchestra of Europe; Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 3 with Santtu-Matias Rouvali and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra; returns to Japan and Korea performing Brahms’s Piano Concerto No. 2; engagements with the orchestras of St. Louis, San Francisco, Pittsburgh and Atlanta; a release on the ECM label of Chick Corea’s The Visitors with legendary vibraphonist Gary Burton; a poignantly timely program with the Wiener Symphoniker pairing Schoenberg’s Ode to Napoleon with Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto followed by a satirical encore by Hanns Eisler; and an interdisciplinary project with the Ruhr Piano Festival uniting school children, renowned choreographers, scholars and world music authorities around the music of Armenian priest, musicologist, and composer Vardapet Komitas.

Gerstein was Artist-in-Residence with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2023–24, Spotlight Artist with the London Symphony Orchestra, Resident Artist at the Festival Aix-en-Provence, and curated a three-part Busoni and His World concert series at London’s Wigmore Hall. In 2023, he released an acclaimed album with the Berliner Philharmoniker and Kirill Petrenko celebrating Rachmaninov’s 150th anniversary and performed Berlin cabaret songs of the 1920s with iconic performance artist and composer HK Gruber. Gerstein also regularly play-conducts programs, most recently the Chamber Orchestra of Europe (Beethoven 4), the Orchestre de Chambre de Paris (a program of Mozart, Salieri and Beethoven Piano Concerti), the Budapest Festival Orchestra (Rhapsody in Blue) and the Czech Philharmonic (Beethoven 1).

Media projects, broadcasts, and digital innovation represent an integral part of Gerstein’s creativity. He has recorded for Platoon/Apple Music, myrios, Deutsche Grammophon, DECCA, Berliner Philharmoniker Recordings, with performances filmed by Unitel, Accentus Music, and EuroArts, broadcast on ORF, BBC, ARTE, and Marquee TV, and streamed on medici.tv and STAGE+. Gerstein’s Music in Time of War, pairing late piano works by Claude Debussy with pieces by Vardapet Komitas, earned him a 2025 special Opus Klassik Award for exceptional curation. Expanding the traditional album concept, the recording is integrated into a hardcover book containing a wealth of documentary images and original scholarship.

Gerstein’s world première recording of Thomas Adès’s Concerto for Piano and Orchestra with the Boston Symphony conducted by the composer was nominated for three Grammys and received the 2020 Gramophone Award. His recording of Adès’s The Tempest Suite, with violinist Christian Tetzlaff, was released on the Platoon label in 2025. Other noteworthy Gerstein albums include Strauss’s Enoch Arden with the great Swiss actor Bruno Ganz (Wings of Desire, The Downfall); Tchaikovsky’s complete Piano Concertos (including the Piano Concerto No. 1 in the composer’s original urtext version) with Semyon Bychkov and the Czech Philharmonic; The Gershwin Moment with the St. Louis Symphony and David Robertson, including special appearances from American singer-songwriter Storm Large and Gary Burton; and Mozart Four-Hand Piano Sonatas with Ferenc Rados.

A true champion of music of our time, Gerstein has commissioned and premièred new works by Timo Andres, Chick Corea, Alexander Goehr, Oliver Knussen and Brad Mehldau, among others. Since giving the world première of Thomas Adès’s Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in 2019, Gerstein has performed the work over 60 times, with 20 different orchestras on three continents. Gerstein also recently recorded Thomas Larcher’s Piano Concerto with the Bergen Philharmonic and Ed Gardner for ECM. His premiere performances of Francisco Coll’s Two Waltzes Toward Civilization at Carnegie Hall will be followed by the creation of Coll’s new Piano Concerto with Sir Simon Rattle and the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in 2026.

Gerstein is dedicated to learning. He is currently Professor of Piano at Berlin’s Hanns Eisler Hochschule and on the faculty of Kronberg Academy. At Kronberg Academy, his series of free online seminars featuring conversations with the 21st century’s leading artistic minds has to date reached an audience of over 150,000 viewers. His guests have included Ai Weiwei, Brad Mehldau, Thomas Adès, Iván Fischer, Alex Ross, Matthew Aucoin, Kirill Serebrennikov, Elizabeth Wilson, Simon & Gerard McBurney, Robert Levin, Reinhard Goebel, Simon Callow, Emma Smith, Deborah Borda, Sir Antonio Pappano, and the late Kaija Saariaho. Gerstein also coaches at the Verbier Festival Academy and at IMS Prussia Cove.

Born in 1979 in Voronezh, Russia, Gerstein attended one of the country’s special music schools for gifted children and taught himself to play jazz at home by listening to his parents’ record collection. Following a chance encounter with Gary Burton in St. Petersburg when he was 14, he was invited as the youngest student to study at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. At the age of 16, Gerstein completed his undergraduate and graduate degrees at New York’s Manhattan School of Music, followed by further studies with Dmitri Bashkirov in Madrid and Ferenc Rados in Budapest. First Prize winner at the 10th Arthur Rubinstein Competition, in 2010, Gerstein received the prestigious Gilmore Artist Award, as well as an Avery Fisher Career Grant. He was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Musical Arts from the Manhattan School of Music in 2021.

source: Enticott Music Management

photo © Marco Borggreve

About the Programme

There is no need to introduce Magdalena Kožená anywhere in the world. This outstanding mezzo-soprano is currently at the height of her remarkable career, which encompasses music from the Baroque to the present day. Kožená is the 2025 recipient of the Antonín Dvořák Prize, which she received together with her husband Simon Rattle. She is also the artist-in-residence of this year’s Dvořák Prague Festival.

Her first recital presents her in a sphere that is close to her Moravian roots. She will perform songs by several composers, all inspired by folk music – two of them, Leoš Janáček and Béla Bartók, were even professional folklorists. A particular feature of the programme is Rachmaninov’s Six Songs, in which he turned to the tradition of the Russian “romance”, a sentimental song genre that was popular in urban salons. Antonín Dvořák stands between these worlds, while in Janáček, Erwin Schulhoff and Bartók folk inspiration emerges as a universal, timeless force.

With thanks to all who supported this concert

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Rudolfinum, Dvořák Hall

The Rudolfinum is one of the most important Neo-Renaissance edifices in the Czech Republic. In its conception as a multi-purpose cultural centre it was quite unique in Europe at the time of its construction. Based on a joint design by two outstanding Czech architects, Josef Zítek and Josef Schultz, a magnificent building was erected serving for concerts, as a gallery, and as a museum. The grand opening on 7 February 1885 was attended by Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria, in whose honour the structure was named. In 1896 the very first concert of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra took place in the Rudolfinum's main concert hall, under the baton of the composer Antonín Dvořák whose name was later bestowed on the hall.

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