An overview of our current annual programme. We hope you enjoy it and look forward to seeing you.
Special concert MUSIK AM 13. – Maria and Magdalena
Programme
Antonio Caldara 1670–1736
Maddalena ai piedi di Cristo
Giovanni Battista Ferrandini 1710–91
Il pianto di Maria
Antonio Vivaldi 1678–1741
Concerto in C minor RV 153
Roberta Mameli, soprano
GIARDINO DI DELIZIE
Introduction 7.15pm: Anna Skorupska
Tickets at €20-30 (reductions of -50% for Cat. II-IV) via www.bachchor.com and at the box office
About the programme
Two women stand at the foot of the cross: the “sinner” Mary Magdalene, torn between her fear of damnation and her hope of redemption, and Jesus’s mother Mary, who rebels against God’s counsel because she has to see her son die. Two highly dramatic scenes from the Italian baroque by Antonio Caldara and Giovanni Battista Ferrandini, performed by the entirely female baroque ensemble Giardino di Delizie from Rome and Italian soprano Roberta Mameli.
MUSIC AM 13. – percussion and organ
Programme
Franz-Jochen Herfert b. 1955
Bel-Pa – first performance
Iannis Xenakis 1922–2001
Rebonds 1987–89
Werner Jacob 1936–2006
Sine nomina super nomina 1985
Franz Bach, percussion
Jörg-Hannes Hahn, organ
Introduction 7.15pm: Prof. Dr. Franz-Jochen Herfert
Admission free, donations requested
Repeat of the concert from 13 June 2022
About the programme
Why do we so seldom hear percussion and organ together? For they have more in common than you might think at first glance. Both have an impressive variety of tonal colours, and from the really tender to the really loud, both can release intensive, overwhelming energies – as we will experience in Iannis Xenakis’ iconic work “Rebonds”, a pulsing rhythmic structure, in Werner Jacobs’ “Sine nomina super nomina”, a friendship expressed in sound, and in a premiere by Franz-Jochen Herfert.
10th benefit concert in aid of the church renovation
Programm
Ännie&Jogs – In the Mood for Swing
Classics of the Swing era with tunes by Cole Porter, Duke Ellington, Louis Thomas Jordan, Errol Garner, Charles Trenet and Franz Doelle, and songs including »Sing Sing Sing«, »Side by Side«, »Don’t Get Around Much Any More«, »Let’s Misbehave«, »Fly Me to the Moon«, »Dream a Little Dream of Me«, »La Mer« and »We’ll Meet Again«
Annette Schmidt, voice and ukelele
Jürgen Burkart, voice and guitar
Admission free, donations requested
MUSIK AM 13. special concert – Messiah
Programme
George Frideric Handel 1685-1759
Messiah HWV 56
Johanna Pommranz, soprano
Wiebke Wighardt, alto
Lars Tappert, tenor
Hans Porten, bass
BACHCHOR STUTTGART
MAIN BAROCKORCHESTER
Guest conductor: Kristina Pfeffer
Tickets at €20-30 (reductions of -50% for Cat. II-IV) via +49 (0)711/2 555 555 and at the box office
About the programme
Handel’s best-known oratorio “Messiah” tells the story of Jesus’s salvation, from the prophecies of the Old Testament to the birth, the Passion and the resurrection of the Saviour to his hoped-for return on the Day of Judgement. The Romantic Friedrich Schleiermacher enthused: “As Jesus was received by the choir of angels, so we accompany him with music and song to the great Halleluja of the ascension; for me, music such as Handel’s ‘Messiah’ is, as it were, a shortened promulgation of the whole of Christianity.”
MUSIK AM 13. – Romantic choral music
Programme
Johannes Brahms 1833–97
Three motets op. 110 (1890)
Heinrich Reimann 1850–1906
Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern op. 25 for organ (1895)
Max Reger 1873–1916
Romanze WoO IV/11 for harmonium
Hugo Wolf 1860–1903
Six sacred songs (1881)
CANTUS STUTTGART
Jörg-Hannes Hahn, conductor and organ
Introduction 7.15pm: Dr. Jürgen Schaarwächter
Admission free, donations requested
About the programme
A cappella singing, that is unaccompanied choral singing, expressing all the nuances of the human voice artistically and sensitively, experienced another impressive blossoming in the 19th century. The most important choral compositions of the late Romantic period include the motets of Johannes Brahms and the “Sechs geistliche Lieder” by Hugo Wolf, setting poems by Eichendorff. These remain a challenge for all ambitious choirs and an incomparable listening experience for audiences.
Summer! Organ – International Organ Cycle 2025
Programme
Felix Mendelssohn 1809–47
The Six Sonatas for Organ op. 65
About the programme
Felix Mendelssohn is amongst the most important German church music composers of the 19th century, not just for his vocal works, but also for his organ compositions. The most important of these are the Six Sonatas op. 65, which stand at the heart of our International Organ Cycle 2025. Their exemplary status lasted for over a century, influencing composers from Joseph Gabriel Rheinberger to Max Reger and Paul Hindemith. Their variety and their musical richness make them a true compendium of organ playing.