A MOZART FESTIVAL IN HAVANA:
The project has been supported by the European Union since 2012, initially for a period of three years. This three-year phase of the project comes to an end in October 2015 and will be celebrated in Havana with a Mozart Festival.
Several concerts will take place from 16 to 24 October 2015 in Havana in which Cuban and European artists will participate; the range of performances also includes film and dance. In the opening concert the Youth Orchestra of the Lyceum Mozartiano de La Habana, conducted by its principal conductor José Antonio Méndez Padrón, performs Mozart’s Concerto for Flute in G major, K. 313, and the Mass in C minor, K. 427. Guests from Europe include soprano Claire Elizabeth Craig, violinist Renaud Capuςon, viola player Gérard Caussé, cellist Clemens Hagen, Siegfried Mauser, Vice-Chancellor of the Universität Mozarteum, and the guest conductor Walter Reiter. This Mozart Festival is planned, however, mainly by Cuban artists such as the flute player Niurka González, soprano Bárbara Llanes, pianist Frank Fernández and the Camerata Romeu; the programme includes works by W. A. Mozart, Franz Schubert and Ludwig van Beethoven, as well as pieces by Leo Brouwer, Ignacio Cervantes and Cayetano Pagueras. This Mozart Festival presents a unique combination of European classical and Cuban music tradition.
For the finale of the Mozart Festival, the Youth Orchestra of the Lyceum Mozartiano de La Habana conducted by Walter Reiter will perform the Symphony in E flat major, K. 543, and the Symphony in C, ‘Jupiter’, K. 551, by W. A. Mozart.
The programme has already been published and can be downloaded from the right column.
CUBAN MOZART RESIDENCE: EUROPEAN DEBUT BY THE CUBAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA AT THE MOZART WEEK 2015:
During the Mozart Week 2015 the Salzburg Mozarteum Foundation succeeded in inviting an orchestral group from the Lyceum Mozartiano de La Habana to Salzburg.
On 27 January 2015 the young Cuban orchestra made its European debut in a special concert in the Great Hall of Salzburg University. This was followed in the evening by a night-time concert in the Great Hall of the Mozarteum, and afterwards in the ‘Cuban’ lounge in the Wiener Saal Mozart’s 259th birthday was appropriately celebrated!