Welcoming spring

Welcoming spring

We welcome spring with Symphony concert with MARIO JOSEN - violin on 7.03 at 19:00 in Philharmonic Hall! Because of his enviable and inimitable virtuosity, Hosen is often compared to Paganini throughout the musical world. He lives and teaches in both Austria and Bulgaria, so like his genius predecessor, whose music he performs and interprets to perfection, he travels constantly to wring endless rapture from the hearts of audiences and to pass on his talent to young violinists. Ruse has not heard the enchanting voice of his violin for a long time and now he comes from Austria especially for his participation in the Ruse Opera programme. The virtuoso Mario Hosen will take to the stage with the Orchestra of the State Opera-Rousse in an unusual and extremely difficult, yet endlessly beautiful romantic programme - typical of his work. This concert, placed in the programme of the Ruse Opera Theatre on the eve of the Eighth of March, carries the special message of undying love and beauty for the women of Little Vienna. In the programme.

Tickets at the Opera box office and HERE

After the tour in Montenegro, on March 11 at 7:00 pm in the Naked Hall of the Income Building. We present the Bulgarian ballet "The Goat's Horn" - composer - Krassimir Kurkchiyski, choreography - prof. Petr Lukanov. The Goat Horn Ballet, with its music that combines both the traditions of the past and the boldness of the avant-garde, with its vivid modernist choreography, with its extreme plasticity and painfully frank drama, has a haunting beauty.

Tickets at the Opera box office and HERE

Within the framework of the 64th "MARCH MUSICAL DAYS" State Opera-Ruse presents:

OPENING OF THE 64TH MF "MARCH MUSIC DAYS

March 14th at 19:00h. in the Dokhodno Building

Soulful, absorbed, as if gazing into the infinity of Eternity is Johannes Brahms' concerto for orchestra, violin and cello. This is the last symphonic work to come out from under the great composer's pen - a work that will occupy an important place in the programme of the concert that will open the 64th edition of the International Music Days of March Festival. The solo instruments in this concert share equality - as equal in their mastery are the two world-renowned instrumentalists - Alexander Sitkovetsky, violin, and Andrei Ionitsa, cello - long-awaited guests of the Festival. Although on most occasions in this Concerto the composer allows the cello to 'speak' first, leaving the violin to respond, and although one is left with the feeling that the Concerto is therefore dominated by the dark timbre, the inimitable arbiter of the equality of this conversation will be conductor Naiden Todorov. The Maestro has chosen to place Antonin Dvorak's Ninth Symphony, a work he interprets brilliantly, at the centre of the concert programme. And his joy and satisfaction at once again standing before the respectable ensemble of the Rousse Philharmonic (the Rousse Opera Orchestra) will shine through with the solemn chords of this symphony, which sings of its composer's wonder at the New World of hard-to-reach America. Brahms was a friend and patron of Dvořák and it was he who turned out to be the first editor of the first edition of the Ninth Symphony. Dvořák would then confess of his work, "I would never have written this piece like this if I had not seen America." Through the power of music, the musicians of Rousse and the audience, under the magical baton of conductor Naiden Todorov, will find themselves in the heart of distant America.

Tickets at the Opera box office and HERE

WORLD PREMIERE of the monodrama "ALMA" by Lyubomir Denev - a painful but deeply honest story about an artist with a difficult fate. Alma Mahler - wife, mother, composer - a woman who tirelessly searched for true and pure inspiration, but received heavy blows from fate. On the 19th of March on stage "OPERA" at 19:00h. Alma will tell you her shocking truth.

Tickets at the Opera box office and HERE

***Tickets for March 18th are sold out!

 

PREMIERE - "MADAME BUTTERFLY" - opera by Giacomo Puccini

Libretto by Luigi Ilica and Giuseppe Giacosa

Conductor - Viliana Valtcheva

Director - Plamen Beykov

Artist - Yulian Tabakov

At once sad and tender is the story of the little Japanese girl in love - a story from the days when, at the beginning of the last century, Europe discovered the inexplicable charm of the far eastern world, to whose fascinating culture Japan also belongs. Thus, it was in those distant days that Madame Butterfly, Giacomo Puccini's masterpiece, was born.

Today the world is "convergent" in its sense of the romantic and the tragic. The new production of the Rousse Opera will look into the past, when these two worlds were at the beginning of their dynamic and irreversible fusion. Helping to find the pure, authentic and little-known elements of Japan's vast culture in today's interpretation are most of the many Japanese ballet dancers in the Rousse Opera company.

Puccini discovered the plot during his stay in London, when he came across a performance of the one-act tragedy "Geisha". It inspired him for his sixth opera. He began composing in 1901, but often interrupted his work. Seeking maximum authenticity, Puccini consulted a famous Japanese actress, Sada Yako, as well as the wife of the Japanese ambassador. As it happened, the opera suffered a complete failure at its world premiere on 17 February 1904 on the stage of La Scala in Milan. The composer, however, did not abandon his work and edited some of the scenes for its next performance on 28 May that year in Brescia. From this stage began the triumphal journey of this opera so tender and yet so sad by Giacomo Puccini.

Tickets at the Opera box office and HERE

Promises me an exciting March!

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