The young Japanese violinist Fumiaki Miura and the Russian pianist Varvara Nepomnyaschaya (known artistically only by her first name) offer next Sunday 24th April at 7 p.m. in the Teatro Fernando de Rojas of the Círculo de Bellas Artes a concert that takes a walk through three centuries of music, from the 18th to the 20th.
The Sonata for violin and piano in F major, K 377/374e by Mozart is marked by its second movement, an Andante in a minor key, with a melancholy that seems to point directly to the romantic world. The 2nd of the three sonatas Brahms wrote for violin and piano is of an almost spring-like serenity and luminosity for a musician who had already turned 53. Prokofiev’s is a complex and long-gestating work dedicated to the great David Oistrakh, who ended up premiering it in 1946 and who, seven years later, would choose its meditative Andante to play at the composer’s funeral. Tickets on sale at this link.