​​Thursday 13 November 2025, 19:30
The Hague: ​Paleiskerk

The World of Ravel

The Enchanted Garden

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Tickets:  € 29,50

Programma

Antonii Baryshevskyi piano
Jelmer de Moed clarinet
Felicia van den End flute
Doriene Marselje harp
Hannah Strijbos viola
Pieter de Koe cello
Yulianna Bezyazychna & Mahault Ska piano duo
(students, Davidsbündler Academy)
Shane van Neerden & Frank Peters piano duo

Birds, fireflies and the whisper of the wind
Maurice Ravel
Noctuelles – Oiseaux tristes – Vallée des cloches (1905) – from Miroirs, for solo piano 
Olivier Messiaen
Abîme d’Oiseaux (1941) – from Quatuor pour la fin du Temps, for solo clarinet 
Toru Takemitsu
And then I knew ’twas Wind (1992) – for flute, viola and harp

The enchanted garden
Maurice Ravel
Ma mère l’Oye (1908–10) – suite for piano duo 
Sofia Gubaidulina
Garten von Freuden und Traurigkeiten (1980) – for flute, cello and piano

The ocean
George Crumb
Vox Balaenae (1971) – for flute, cello and amplified piano Claude Debussy
Nocturnes (1897–99) – transcription for two pianos by Maurice Ravel     

The magic of silence and a theatrical journey

​Ravel was fiercely protective of his privacy and regarded his home in Montfort-l’Amaury as a sanctuary. He designed the Japanese garden himself, filling it with exotic flowers. It was a place of tranquillity and beauty where he loved to seek inspiration. This inspiration bore fruit in his suite Ma mère l’Oye, based on the fairy tales of Mother Goose. The final movement of this piece opens onto an enchanted garden.

​This nature-themed programme also features works by four composers who learnt from Ravel how to paint with sound: Sofia Gubaidulina, who evokes a mystical garden in Garten von Freuden und Traurigkeiten; Toru Takemitsu, whose hushed masterpiece And Then I Knew 'Twas Wind is featured; Olivier Messiaen, whose clarinet solo from Quatuor pour la fin du temps is performed; and George Crumb, whose Vox Balaenae takes the audience on a theatrical journey into the depths of the ocean among whales, bathed in blue light.

Ravel's transcription for two pianos of Claude Debussy's Nocturnes will be the final piece performed at the concert. This piece is full of striking sounds, from the stillness of clouds drifting in the air to the exotic festivity that suddenly bursts into life, and the mythical sirens that lure Odysseus and his sailors as they travel across the sea.