Enjoy Gordan Nikolić in a double role. As solo violinist in Brahms' Violin Concerto, a heavenly work that Nikolić knows like no other. And as leader from the first desk in Mozart's Jupiter Symphony. So a heavenly violin concerto and a divine symphony, spiced with a touch of Bartók.
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Brahms' violin concerto by master violinist Gordan Nikolić
Gordan Nikolić in spotlight
The Netherlands Chamber Orchestra lets its leader and violinist Gordan Nikolić shine in Brahms' Violin Concerto , one of the most beautiful ever written. Especially the slow movement, which the composer had called, with a sense of understatement, an “inane adagio,” has become immortal. Nikolić knows the work like no other. During his time as concertmaster with the London Symphony Orchestra, he gave a memorable interpretation of it with that orchestra.
From Brahms heavenly violin concerto to Mozart's divine symphony
As the second work on the program, Mozart's Symphony No. 41 . He himself never heard this one, but after his death it became his most famous symphony. And rightly so because the sparkling music stands like a house. Just listen to the finale in which Mozart weaves no fewer than five melodies into a beautiful unity. No wonder the symphony was later named after the Greek supreme god Jupiter, a name the work still bears with honor. Prior to these divine sounds, the concert begins earthily with the beautiful Romanian Dances, for which Bartók was inspired by Romanian folk music.