Salle Bourgie
Pavillon Claire et Marc Bourgie
Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal
1339, rue Sherbrooke Ouest,
Montreal (Quebec)
Canada
Ticket office
514 285-2000, option 1
Toll-free from outside Montreal
1 800 899-6873, option 1
The baroque mandolin reinvented
Avi Avital has revolutionized the perception of the mandolin in the world of classical music. The charismatic virtuoso brings an orchestral dimension and presence to this instrument that fascinates audiences around the world.
Vivaldi and the Venetian spirit
Antonio Vivaldi composes for the mandolin with his characteristic brilliance and virtuosity. The Concerto in C major, RV 425, displays all the brilliance of Vivaldi's writing, while the Concerto for Lute in D major, transcribed by Avital, reveals the natural affinities between these plucked string instruments.
Bach transcribed and transformed
Avi Avital takes two concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach—the Concerto for Keyboard in D minor, BWV 1052, and the Concerto for Violin in A minor, BWV 1041—and adapts them for the mandolin. These daring transcriptions shed new light on familiar works, revealing unexpected textures.
From Scarlatti to Avison
Alessandro Scarlatti and Charles Avison enrich the program, the latter with his reinterpretation of Domenico Scarlatti in a concerto grosso of refined elegance. In all the concertante works, Avi Avital conducts Les Violons du Roy from his instrument, in an irresistible symbiosis between soloist and ensemble.
Conductors and soloists
Avi Avital
Mandolin and conductorThe first mandolin soloist to be nominated for a classical Grammy, Avi Avital has been compared to Andres Segovia for his championship of his instrument and to Jascha Heifetz for his incredible virtuosity. Passionate and “explosively charismatic” (New York Times) in live performance, he is the driving force behind the reinvigoration of the mandolin: for more than two decades he has reshaped the history and the future of his instrument, playing it in the most prestigious halls all over the world. In addition to that, Avi Avital has expanded the mandolin repertoire not only with transcriptions of various pieces, but by commissioning over 100 works for the mandolin including concertos for mandolin and orchestra by Fazil Say, Jennifer Higdon, Anna Clyne, Avner Dorman and Giovanni Sollima.
Highlights of the 2025/26 season include performances with Il Giardino Armonico, the Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg, the Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich, the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, the Geneva Camerata, the Ensemble Resonanz, the Basel Chamber Orchestra, the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the Fuse Ensemble, the Pacific Symphony Orchestra, and a residency with the Duisburg Philharmonic Orchestra. He will be working with conductors such as Giovanni Antonini, Alondra de la Parra, Jeanette Sorrell, Anna Rakitina and Hugo Ticciati. Avi Avital will give recitals and chamber performances with Omer Klein, Ksenija Sidorova and the Viano Quartet, and will return to the Alte Oper Frankfurt, the Berlin Philharmonie, the Muziekgebouw Amsterdam, the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, the Kissinger Sommer and the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, among others.
Avi Avital’s other recent engagements include Chicago, Seattle, Toronto & Vancouver Symphony Orchestras, Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, Los Angeles Philharmonic, NDR Radiophilharmonie, Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen, Academy of St Martin in the Fields, Yomiuri Nippon Symphony, Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, TonhalleOrchester Zürich, Orchestra Sinfonica Nazionale della RAI, Orchestra della Svizzera italiana, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Orchestre National de Lyon, Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Israel Philharmonic, and the Norwegian Radio Orchestra working with conductors such as Zubin Mehta, Kent Nagano, Alan Gilbert, Robert Spano, Osmo Vänskä, Yutaka Sado, Nicholas McGegan, Omer Meir Wellber, Giovanni Antonini, Jonathan Cohen and Ton Koopman.
In 2023, Avi Avital launched his new venture, the ensemble Between Worlds, with a three-part residency at Boulez Saal in Berlin and concerts, that led the musicians to in Bucharest, Frankfurt, Warsaw, Hamburg, Gstaad, Ludwigshafen and Antwerp, as well as festivals like BBC Proms, Schleswig-Holstein and Enescu. The ensemble was formed to explore different genres, cultures and musical worlds focusing on different geographical regions and in its first year featured traditional, classical and folk music from the Iberian Peninsula, the Black Sea and South Italy.
Avi Avital’s versatility has led to features as Portrait Artist at Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, BOZAR Brussels, Dortmund Konzerthaus and as Artist-in-Residence at the Bodensee Festival and La Jolla Music Society California. He is a regular presence at major festivals such as Aspen, Salzburg, Hollywood Bowl, Tanglewood, Ravenna, MISA Shanghai, Cheltenham, Verbier, Lucerne, Bad Kissingen, Rheingau Musik Festival, Gstaad and Tsinandali.
An exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist, Avi Avital released his first album with his ensemble Between Worlds in 2025: Song of the Birds combines works by Manuel de Falla, Otar Taktakishvili and Fazil Say with traditional folk pieces in arrangements by David Bruce and others and was acclaimed by audiences and critics alike. Concertos (2023), which he recorded with Il Giardino Armonico and Giovanni Antonini, features mandolin concertos by Vivaldi, Hummel, Bach, Barbella and Paisiello. This album won an Opus Klassik award in 2024 for Concerto Recording of the Year. His album The Art of the Mandolin (2020) has been received with high praise and top reviews in The Times, Independent, Gramophone, BBC Music Magazine as well as the international press. Previous recordings Bach (2019), Avital meets Avital (2017), Vivaldi (2015), an album of Avital’s own transcriptions of Bach concertos (2012) and Between Worlds (2014) also received numerous awards.
Born in Be’er Sheva in southern Israel, Avital began learning the mandolin at the age of eight and soon joined the flourishing mandolin youth orchestra founded and directed by his charismatic teacher, Russian-born violinist Simcha Nathanson. He studied at the Jerusalem Music Academy and the Conservatorio Cesare Pollini in Padua with Ugo Orlandi. He plays on a mandolin made by Israeli luthier Arik Kerman.
Program
Concerto Grosso No. 3 in F Major
· Concerto for Lute in D Major, RV 93 (arr. A. Avital)
· Concerto for Mandolin in C Major, RV 425
· Concerto for Keyboard in D Minor, BWV 1052 (arr. A. Avital)
· Concerto for Violin in A Minor, BWV 1041 (arr. A. Avital)
Concerto Grosso No. 5 in D Minor (after D. Scarlatti)
Other performances of the concert
Partners