Tip Toe Tchaikovsky

Dear Little Ones

Tip Toe Tchaikovsky


2018-12-09 Sun 10:00Recital Hall 350Buy
2018-12-09 Sun 12:30Recital Hall 350Buy
PING HENG, consultant
YIN-FANG CHANG, I-CHING LI, narrator
VANESSA LIN, scriptwriter
I-CHING LI, HAO-TUN TENG, violin
GRACE HUANG, viola
YI-SHIEN LIEN, cello
SHUEN CHIEH, harp
PI-TZU YANG, percussion
VERA HUI-PIN HSU, piano
The Capital Ballet Taipei, dancer

Nutcracker, op. 71 : ‘Overture’, ‘March’, ‘Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy’, ‘Russian Dance’, ‘Waltz of the Flowers’
Sleeping Beauty : ‘Waltz’
Swan Lake : ‘Scene’, ‘Danse des petits cygnes’
String Quartet No.1 in D major, II. Andante cantabile (excerpt)
Symphony No. 6, Op. 74, B minor, Pathetique
IV. Finale (excerpt)
Piano Concerto No.1 in B-Flat Minor, Op. 23
I. Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso - Allegro con spirito (excerpt)
Violin Concerto in D Major, No.35
III. Finale : Allegro vivacissimo (excerpt)
1812 Overture (Arranged by Ting-Chuan Chen)

[Notice of Change]
December, 9, 2018 “Dear Little Ones – Tip Toe Tchaikovsky” : Viola will be performed by Jubel Chen.

Ballet is art on tiptoes, and Tchaikovsky, who composed the three most known ballets--The Nutcracker, Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty, is the prince of this art. “Dear Little Ones” is NSO’s annual concert designed for children which takes place every year in the festive and magical month of December. Our resident conductor Yin-fang Chang and violinist I-ching Li will lead the audience of children and adults into Tchaikovsky’s dreamy world of ballet music: the encounter between the Nutcracker prince and Clara, the princess in the tower who was woken up by the kiss of true love by the prince after one hundred years of slumber, and the beautiful Swan princess in the tragic Swan Lake. Apart from these, the concert also features other well-known music written by the composer that are diverse in style, such as the shimmering summerly Barcarolle, and Andante Cantabile, whose sweet melody moved Tolstoy to tears; the program also includes Pathetique, which the composer termed as his finest achievement, and the vehement 1812 overture.