Start of the 2022 concert season

Finally it’s happening again, on May 18 you can experience the first concert of our ensemble hartmann21 this year. Look forward to the following program at 6:30 and 8 pm:

Aribert Reimann (* 1936): Solo
for oboe solo
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Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905–1963): Kleine Suite Nr. 2 (“Little Suite II”)
for piano solo
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Aribert Reimann: Solo
for clarinet solo
#
Aribert Reimann: …ni una sombra
für soprano, clarinet and piano

Like last year, this concert will be offered at two times to account for the ongoing pandemic and to give you the most carefree concert experience possible. Tickets are available through our event page. We look forward to your visit!

An event of the © Karl Amadeus Hartmann-Gesellschaft e.V.,
sponsored by: Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst, Kulturreferat der Landeshauptstadt München, Bezirk Oberbayern and LfA Förderbank Bayern.

Invitation to the Annual General Meeting 2021

The Karl Amadeus Hartmann Society invites its members to the 2021 Annual General Meeting. It will take place on December 15, 2021 at 6 p.m. in the rooms of the Karl Amadeus Hartmann-Gesellschaft e.V.. (Franz-Joseph-Straße 20, 80801 München) and online.
For more information please contact us via e-mail.

«Mara tanzt durch München» – digital family concert of the Nationaltheater Mannheim

Animated film (Ernesto Lucas) with music by Karl Amadeus Hartmann

The concert dates for 2021 are online!

After a long Corona break, we are also starting the new season and look forward to seeing you there!

13.07. ensemble hartmann21 (6.30 and 8.00 PM each)
04.08. ensemble hartmann21 (6.30 and 8.00 PM each)
22.09. Philharmonisches Streichquartett der Berliner Philharmoniker (8.00 PM)
12.10. Juliane Banse & Henri Bonamy (6.30 and 8.00 PM each
10.11. ensemble hartmann21 (6.30 and 8.00 PM each)

Click here to go to the event page, where you can also book tickets online: hartmann-gesellschaft.de/veranstaltungen/

Baden-Baden Easter Festival: Cancellation of concerts with works by Hartmann

Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the following performances of works by Karl Amadeus Hartmann at the Baden-Baden Easter Festival in cooperation with the Berliner Philharmoniker had to be cancelled:

06.04.2020 Simplicius Simplicissimus (Musical direction: Michael Hasel)
06.04.2020 First string quartett “Carillon” (Philharmonisches Streichquartett)
08.04.2020 Lamento (Soprano: Juliane Banse)
09.04.2020 Simplicius Simplicissimus (Musical direction Michael Hasel)
11.04.2020 Simplicius Simplicissimus (Musical direction: Michael Hasel)

On the death of Mariss Janson

Mariss Jansons – who died on December 1 last year – was posthumously awarded the Karl Amadeus Hartmann Medal yesterday. The Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks hereby honours conductors who have had a lasting influence on and supported the orchestra.
We welcome the award and bow to this great maestro!

Ingolf Turban (Violin) // hartmann21

With the violinist Ingolf Turban, one of the most outstanding and exciting musicians encounters the work of Karl Amadeus Hartmann, exposes himself to it, reflects, traces references and – as an interpreter – lets the listener participate in his individual world of experience. In a singularly composed program, Turban creates a kaleidoscope of different perspectives and modes of perception, allowing one to experience Hartmann’s musically progressive Second suite for violin solo in a new way.
In National Socialist Germany, Hartmann rigorously refused to be appropriated by the totalitarian regime and retreated into “inner emigration”, while at the same time he tried to speak all the more eloquently abroad and was also perceived as a symbol of a “different Germany” – which set culture and humanism against barbarism. He consciously understood his composition as a “Gegenaktion” [“counteraction”]. In each of his works, Hartmann sought international solidarity with allies in spirit, be it through the use of texts and melodies of forbidden artists or with the help of Jewish songs. Especially the use of the Jewish “Eliyahu hanavi” in all compositions of the years 1933 to 1945 became Hartmann’s lament for the extermination of the Jewish people, but also stood for the persecution of all opponents of the regime. The first traces of Jewish melismas can be found in his early work as early as 1927 and lead to the first expressions in Hartmann’s Second suite for solo violin.
“After Bach and Reger, it is probably only Hartmann who succeeded in giving the violin such an unusually complex polyphony. This is all the more astonishing when one considers that Hartmann, as a trombone student of only 22 years of age at the time, was able to fathom the possibilities of the violin so brilliantly to the limits of what was possible,” said Ingolf Turban in an interview in 2013 (Festschrift for the international “Karl Amadeus Hartmann Year 2013”).
It is therefore only logical that our concert will cover a wide range from Johann Sebastian Bach’s Partita No. 2 to Béla Bartók’s Melodia and Paul Hindemith’s Sonata for solo violin op. 31, No. 2. Paul Hindemith, too, still needs to be comprehended far more pluralistically and celebrated for his occasionally even humorous variety of colours.

An event of the © Karl Amadeus Hartmann-Gesellschaft e. V., sponsored by Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst, Kulturreferat der Landeshauptstadt München und Bezirk Oberbayern.