Monday 25 August
1.00 p.m. – c. 2.00 p.m.
Cadogan Hall
Mozart: Piano Sonata in D, K 311 (first performance at The Proms)
Mahler: Piano Quartet in a (first performance at The Proms)
Richard Strauss: Metamorphosen (version for septet, arr. R. Leopold; first performance of this arrangement at The Proms)
Louis Schwizgebel, piano (Proms debut artist, New Generation Artist)
Katarzyna Budnik-Gałązka, viola (Proms debut artist)
Marcin Zdunik, cello (Proms debut artist)
Tomasz Januchta, double bass (Proms debut artist)
Royal String Quartet
BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist Louis Schwizgebel made his concerto debut at the Proms earlier this season and now returns for a programme of chamber music.
He is joined by the Royal String Quartet for a concert that concludes with Richard Strauss's extraordinary Metamorphosen - heard here in the string septet form in which Strauss originally drafted it, before he expanded it for an ensemble of 23 solo strings.
Alongside it is a rarely heard curiosity - Mahler's contemplative Piano Quartet movement, the tantalising torso of a work never completed.
1.00 p.m. – c. 2.00 p.m.
Cadogan Hall
Mozart: Piano Sonata in D, K 311 (first performance at The Proms)
Mahler: Piano Quartet in a (first performance at The Proms)
Richard Strauss: Metamorphosen (version for septet, arr. R. Leopold; first performance of this arrangement at The Proms)
Louis Schwizgebel, piano (Proms debut artist, New Generation Artist)
Katarzyna Budnik-Gałązka, viola (Proms debut artist)
Marcin Zdunik, cello (Proms debut artist)
Tomasz Januchta, double bass (Proms debut artist)
Royal String Quartet
BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artist Louis Schwizgebel made his concerto debut at the Proms earlier this season and now returns for a programme of chamber music.
He is joined by the Royal String Quartet for a concert that concludes with Richard Strauss's extraordinary Metamorphosen - heard here in the string septet form in which Strauss originally drafted it, before he expanded it for an ensemble of 23 solo strings.
Alongside it is a rarely heard curiosity - Mahler's contemplative Piano Quartet movement, the tantalising torso of a work never completed.
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