10-26 May
Become a FriendDaniel Pioro & James McVinnie
Mystery Sonatas - Part 1: The Joyful Mysteries
Wednesday 18 May, 8.30PM
Enter into Heinrich Biber’s experimental musical mind in the Mystery Sonatas for violin and continuo, performed by Daniel Pioro and James McVinnie over three consecutive evenings. Biber melds virtuosity and theatricality with an emotional power that renders an experience as dazzling today as when first heard in the seventeenth century.
A journey for audience, artist, and instrument, the work represents the fifteen Mysteries of the Rosary, each sonata requiring a different tuning of the violin’s strings. Uncovering fresh colours and timbres, the result is a set of works constantly questing, striving, and contorting to plumb ever-deeper spiritual states. The work concludes with the ‘Guardian Angel’, an extraordinary unaccompanied Passacaglia for the violin.
Unpublished during Biber’s lifetime, it’s quite possible the Mystery Sonatas were written to accompany private devotions, and were in fact never intended for the public’s ears. In the intimate setting of the Octagon Chapel, this work will astonish in the hands of two artists renowned for their uncompromising and daring approach to music-making.
With thanks to Festival Friend, Roger Rowe
Download your free programme here
Important information
Duration: 60 Minutes
Book Parts Two and Three
Tickets
Concessions: 10% off tickets priced £10 or over for D/deaf or disabled, Full-time students, Go 4Less cardholders and Jobseekers
Essential Companions: Any audience member requiring an essential carer/companion can get one free ticket. Relevant discounts or concessions still apply to the paid ticket.
Young NNF: £7.50 tickets for ages 18-25 with our FREE YoungNNF membership. Sign up here
Under 18: £7.50
Book all thee Mystery Sonatas and get 10% off each ticket: Ticket must be booked in the same transaction. Offer automatically applied at checkout.
Select a performance
Wednesday
18 May
08:30 pm
£7.50 - £20.00
Image Credit: Daniel Pioro © Stefan Thorndah