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Concertino Praga 2020
Saturday, September 12, 2020, 2.00 pm
For the Future


Programme

Joseph Haydn: Oboe Concerto in C major, Hob. VIIg: C1Jacques Ibert: Concertino da CameraLudwig van Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 1 in C major, Op. 15 (II. Largo, III. Rondo. Allegro)

There are never enough young talents, and giving them a chance at big festivals is the best way to invest in their futures and in the musical life of future generations. This year, the Talent Stage at the Dvořák Prague Festival will present participants in the competition Concertino Praga who finished in 5th through 8th places and will offer a practical demonstration of the balanced quality of the field at artistic competitions, where there truly are no losers. This year for the first time, the traditional radio competition Concertino Praga is being held in cooperation with the Academy of Classical Music, and the finalists will also be presenting themselves to the public at the Dvořák Prague Festival for the first time.

One of the artists who was originally to have appeared at Talent Stage was the Russian flautist Lukerya Mishneva performing Blodek’s Flute Concerto in D Major. She was also awarded honourable mention second class at this year’s Concertino Praga. Because of the government’s measures to fight the epidemic, however, the access of Russian citizens to the Czech Republic has been limited, and unfortunately the competition organiser were unable to arrange an official exception for Ms. Mishneva that would permit the talented flautist to enter the Czech Republic.

This event is part of our Family Day

  • Dress code: casual
  • Doors close: 13:55
  • End of concert: 15:00

Artists

Ivaylo Vassilev

The Bulgarian pianist Ivaylo Vassilev studied at the National School of Music in Sofia from 2014 to 2019. He has already earned more than twenty awards at numerous international competitions including the Grand Prize at the competition De Bach au Jazz in Athens, the Gold Nutcracker in Moscow, victory at the Munich competition Münchner Klavierpodium, 2nd prize at the César Franck Competition in Brussels, and 2nd prize at the competition Virtuosi per musica di pianoforte in Ústí nad Labem. He has appeared on many important stages in Russia and Bulgaria with renowned artists including Konstantin Ilievsky and Sascha Goetzel. In the autumn of 2019 he issued his first professional CD with recordings of piano concertos by W. A. Mozart and Dmitri Shostakovich. His musical talent takes many forms: besides the broad repertoire that he interprets, he also devotes himself to composing and improvising, and he plays in chamber ensembles.

Ivaylo Vassilev - piano

Márton Bubreg

A native of Germany with Hungarian roots, Márton Bubreg began playing saxophone at the age of five. He is a graduate of the Hochschule für Musik und Theater in Munich, and he has taken part at a number of masterclasses led by renowned performers. He has won many international competitions in Japan, Italy, France, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Austria, the Ukraine, Hungary, Andorra, Serbia, and Croatia. He and his brother Bence (clarinet) won first prize in the duo category and became the overall winners of the competition Concertina Praga 2018. As a soloist, he has collaborated with the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Tyrol Symphony Orchestra, and the Chamber Orchestra Innstrumenti. He has appeared on many prestigious concert stages including the Konzerthaus in Vienna, the Mozarteum in Salzburg, the Hall of the Ukrainian National Philharmonic in Kiev, the Gasteig in Munich, the Rudolfinum in Prague, and New York’s Carnegie Hall.

Carlo Cesaraccio

The Italian oboist Carlo Cesaraccio began his studies in 2015 under the guidance of his father, and since 2018 he has been taking part in the masterclasses of the Berlin Philharmonic oboist Christoph Hartmann at the music academy I Musici di Parma. He is furthering his education at other masterclasses led by such important musicians as Thomas Indermühle and Hansjörg Schellenberger. He has won several competitions including the International Competition for Young Musicians in Povoletto, the national competition in Campagnano, Italy, the Premio Crescendo in Florence, and the Samnium International Oboe Competition in Beneveneto. He has appeared as a soloist on many Italian stages with the renowned ensembles Le Cameriste Ambrosiane, I Musici di Parma, and the Orchestra da Camera Ellipsis. He has also appeared in German and Austria (at the Muth Halle in Vienna) and at Music Days in Montenegro.

Carlo Cesaraccio - oboe

Stanislav Gallin

Stanislav Gallin is a graduate of the Musical Grammar School of Saint Petersburg, Russia, the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, and the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava, Slovakia. He furthered his education by studying at the Mozarteum in Salzburg and at a number of masterclasses under teachers including Lazar Berman. He has appeared on the concert stage not only in the Czech Republic and Russia, but also in other European countries, the USA, Asia, and Africa. He has appeared as soloist with orchestras including the Saint Petersburg Philharmonic, the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Philharmonia, and the Bruno Walter Symphony Orchestra. He has collaborated with conductors including Tomáš Brauner, Jack Martin Händler, Jakub Hrůša, Vahan Mardirossian, Ondřej Vrabec, and Peter Vrábel. He is a founding member of the Orbis Trio, which proved itself to be one of the most successful European ensembles of its generation in 2009, when it became a laureate of four international competitions, including one of the most prestigious – the International Chamber Music Competition Hamburg, Germany. Since 2009 Mr. Gallin has been teaching at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague as a specialised assistant in the piano accompaniment department.

Stanislav Gallin - piano accompaniment

Rudolfinum, Suk Hall

Suk Hall is the newest hall in the Neo-Renaissance Rudolfinum. It was created from 1940 to 1942 during modifications of the adjacent Dvořák Hall, as a smaller concert hall. In designing the interior decor architects Antonín Engel and Bohumír Kozák took inspiration from the original style of the Rudolfinum’s architects Josef Zítek and Josef Schulz, thus Suk Hall fits perfectly into the original composition of the building. During the most recent modifications in 2015, according to a design by architect Petr Hrůša, the acoustics of the hall and its connection to the Rudolfinum’s atrium were improved while respecting the historical value of these premises, protected as a historical landmark. Suk Hall has a new grand piano and continues to be intended mainly for performances of chamber music.