Royal Albert Hall 11 September 2020 - Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Isata Kanneh-Mason | GoComGo.com

Sheku Kanneh-Mason and Isata Kanneh-Mason

Royal Albert Hall, London, Great Britain
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7:30 PM
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Important Info
Festival: Proms 2020
Type: Classical Concert
City: London, Great Britain
Starts at: 19:30
Duration:

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Festival

Proms 2020

Musical greats - from the past and the present - brought together in one extraordinary Proms season 2020.

Programme
Ludwig van Beethoven: Cello Sonata no. 4 in C major, Op.102 no.1
Samuel Barber: Sonata for cello and piano in C minor, Op.6
Frederick Bridge: Mélodie
Sergei Rachmaninoff: Cello Sonata in G minor, Op.19
Overview

Star British cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason and pianist Isata Kanneh-Mason perform a specially recorded recital of Beethoven, Barber, Bridge and Rachmaninov.

At only 21 cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason is already sought-after internationally, having won BBC Young Musician in 2016 and performed two years later to a worldwide audience of over 35 million at the wedding of Prince Harry and Megan Markle.

For this specially pre-recorded Proms recital he is joined by 24-year-old Isata Kanneh-Mason, the eldest of the family’s seven musical siblings, who released her first solo CD last year to great acclaim.

Continuing our 250th-anniversary celebrations of Beethoven’s birth, his C major Cello Sonata reflects the concentration of expression and form typical of his late period. By contrast, Barber’s sonata, though written in 1932, looks backwards, its drama and lyricism rooted in the Romantic era.

After Bridge’s passionate, youthful and lightly Impressionistic Mélodie comes Rachmaninov’s post-Romantic sonata, a full-blooded cornerstone of the cello/piano repertoire whose macabre scherzo movement and joyously ebullient finale contrast with a slow movement of melting bittersweet indulgence.

Venue Info

Royal Albert Hall - London
Location   Kensington Gore, South Kensington

The Royal Albert Hall is a concert hall on the northern edge of South Kensington, London. One of the United Kingdom's most treasured and distinctive buildings, it is held in trust for the nation and managed by a registered charity (which receives no government funding). It can seat 5,272.

Since the hall's opening by Queen Victoria in 1871, the world's leading artists from many performance genres have appeared on its stage. It is the venue for the Proms concerts, which have been held there every summer since 1941. It is host to more than 390 shows in the main auditorium annually, including classical, rock and pop concerts, ballet, opera, film screenings with live orchestral accompaniment, sports, awards ceremonies, school and community events, and charity performances and banquets. A further 400 events are held each year in the non-auditorium spaces.

The hall was originally supposed to have been called the Central Hall of Arts and Sciences, but the name was changed to the Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences by Queen Victoria upon laying the Hall's foundation stone in 1867, in memory of her husband, Prince Albert, who had died six years earlier. It forms the practical part of a memorial to the Prince Consort; the decorative part is the Albert Memorial directly to the north in Kensington Gardens, now separated from the Hall by Kensington Gore.

Important Info
Festival: Proms 2020
Type: Classical Concert
City: London, Great Britain
Starts at: 19:30
Duration:
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