For its 12th edition, the International Spring Orchestra Festival has joined forces with Festivals Malta and the Valletta 2018 Foundation. The much lauded ISOFestival will kick off on April 6, raising the curtain on nine days of high-quality classical music performances featuring acclaimed international and Maltese artists.

This year’s line-up features big names like the veteran Basque Spanish pianist Joaquín Achúcarro, Mariinsky and St Petersburg Opera singers Yuri Vlasov and Larisa Pominova, and conductor Brian Schembri.

Brian SchembriBrian Schembri

Other renowned artists include French pianists Roland Conil and Véronique Muzy, German violinist Hans-Peter Hoffman, Italian composer and conductor Dimitri Scarlato, the Hungarian Somogyi String Quartet, the European Union Chamber Orchestra, the Aquilon Trio and Tyresias Ensemble from London, and the Baltic Neopolis Virtuosi from Poland.

Nine concerts in all will take place at the Manoel Theatre, the National Museum of Archeology, Pjazza Teatru Rjal, and the Malta Society of Arts (Palazzo De La Salle) - starring soloists, chamber ensembles and orchestras in repertory ranging from Beethoven and the Romantics through Bartok, Stravinsky and Debussy, to eclectic new premieres.

The Festival’s opening concert, to be held at the recently refurbished Manoel Theatre on Friday 6th April, will present a breathtaking programme spot-lighting the world-touring European Union Chamber Orchestra, soprano Larisa Pominova, Bass Yuri Vlasov, and conductor Brian Schembri, who will bring to life Shostakovich’s most profound work, his Fourteenth Symphony.

“All my life and all my energies,” he said, “are devoted to the most beautiful thing on earth – the struggle to liberate mankind”.

Other works in the programme include Fiorini’s new Pentimenti, a Valletta 2018 Foundation commission, and Honegger’s Second Symphony. We will also have a chance, for the first time in Malta, to listen to a real celesta, brought over from Italy especially for this occasion. Sir Simon Rattle believes “there's something very special about Joaquín Achúcarro. There are very few pianists in the world who can get that sound from the piano".

On April 8 we'll have a rare opportunity at the Manoel Theatre to hear the master in person, now eighty-five, playing Chopin’s complete Op 28 Preludes, music by Claude Debussy (this year marking the centenary of his death), and Falla’s Hommage à Debussy.

On Monday 9th April the Manoel Theatre will host a one-of-a kind concert by virtuoso pianists Roland Conil and Véronique Muzy and percussionists Christian Bini and Pierre Quiriny championing Bartok’s majestic Sonata for Two pianos and Percussion. World premieres of new works by Roland Conil and Dominique Lièvre, on subjects drawn from antiquity, make up the first half of the programme.

April 10 and 11 are given over to the ISO Festival's popular Rising Stars concert series, a platform dedicated to young talent and the stars of the future. This year our pianists are Jean Marc Fabri, Francis James Zammit, Daphné Delicata and Daniel Zak Borg.

Not to be missed, both evenings are at the Malta Society of Arts, starting at 7pm. Admission is free.

On April 12, the London based Aquilon Trio make their Maltese debut, again at the Malta Society of Arts. Works include Bartok’s Contrasts trio and Stravinsky’s trio version of Histoire du Soldat as well as Khachaturian’s celebrated early Trio and the premiere of Timothy Salter’s Triptych. The performance begins at 8pm.

April 13 offers two concerts. Firstly, a spectacle by Ritmi-KA, a group of fifty pupils from St Margherita College Middle School, Cospicua, coached by the Marseille based HOP TRIO. This is the third consecutive year that the ISO Festival has teamed up with Education+ to bring to Valletta three highly-regarded percussionists to work with these students. With the help of their teachers, they'll transform the experience into a piece to be performed at Pjazza Teatru Rjal. 12:30pm. Admission is free.

Secondly, at the Salon of the National Museum of Archaeology at 8pm, the Budapest-based Somogyi String Quartet will perform Bartok’s iconic Quartets Nos 2 & 6 and Stravinsky’s Three Pieces written in 1914 – music that an American poet of the time likened to 'a pale smoke of violin music blowing over the moon'.

The Festival will wrap up on April 14 with a chamber orchestral concert at the Manoel Theatre at 8pm featuring the London Tyresias Ensemble and the Baltic Neopolis Virtuosi from Poland under the baton of composer-conductor Dimitri Scarlato.

The programme features Lutoslawski’s Musique Funèbre, world premieres of new pieces by Fiorini and Scarlato, and Bartok’s timeless Divertimento for strings.

http://www.iso-festival.com

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