Artists

Santtu-Matias Rouvali – conductor
Nicola Benedetti – violin

Programme

Marsalis Violin Concerto Listen

— Interval —

Ellington Three Black Kings Listen

Gershwin arr. Bennett Porgy and Bess: a Symphonic Picture Listen

Our series Let Freedom Ring: Celebrating the Sounds of America continues with music by three American composers bridging the worlds of classical music and jazz.

Wynton Marsalis has won nine Grammy Awards, for both jazz and classical recordings, and has been at the forefront of the American music scene for decades. His violin concerto, composed in 2015 for the Philharmonia’s Featured Artist Nicola Benedetti, embraces the fiddle melodies of Benedetti’s native Scotland, African-American spirituals, marching bands, blues and gospel, and ends with a foot-stomping hootenanny. It’s a musical embodiment of America’s myriad migration stories, sometimes deeply soulful, sometimes swirling with joyous energy.

Three Black Kings was Duke Ellington’s final composition, commissioned by Dance Theater Harlem as a tribute to Martin Luther King. Ellington’s piece for jazz band and symphony orchestra ends with a gospel-inspired eulogy to the great civil rights leader. But first he invokes two earlier kings renowned for their wisdom and faith – Balthazar, traditionally one of the wise men who visited the child Jesus, and the Old Testament King Solomon.

Gershwin’s 1935 opera Porgy and Bess, with its use of American folk idioms, its head-on engagement with poverty and racism, and the composer’s stipulation that it should be sung by an all-Black cast, is a landmark in American musical history. Tonight’s ‘Symphonic Picture’ features many of the opera’s unforgettable moments, including ‘Bess, You Is My Woman Now’, ‘It Ain’t Necessarily So’, and ‘Summertime’.

Part of Let Freedom Ring

Supported by the Philharmonia Foundation USA

Need to know

Prices & Discounts

£15 – £70

Multi-buy offer available; under-18s and concessions discounts available; discounted tickets for students via Student Pulse (limited availability)

Running time

1 hr 50 mins, including a 20 minute interval

Recommended age

From 7+

Programme notes

Free printed programmes will be available at the venue. Digital programme notes available here.

Box office

Philharmonia Box Office: 0800 652 6717
Monday to Friday 10am – 5pm

Venue

Royal Festival Hall

Royal Festival Hall

Southbank Centre
Belvedere Road
London
SE1 8XX

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