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
Beyond the myth
Antonio Salieri and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: two names that legend has pitted against each other, but which history reveals to be contemporaries who held each other in high esteem. Paul Agnew brings these composers together in a program that celebrates the effervescence of Viennese classicism.
The nobility of the horn
Louis-Philippe Marsolais lends his warm tone to the two horn concertos on the program. Mozart's Concerto No. 2 testifies to the composer's particular affection for this instrument, while Haydn offers a page of playful elegance in his Concerto No. 2 in D major.
Haydn the visionary
Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 47, “The Palindrome,” reveals the composer's humor and formal ingenuity. Its minuet, which can be read in both directions, testifies to the playful inventiveness that characterizes Haydn's genius.
Boccherini and the devil
Luigi Boccherini's music enriches the concert with his Symphony No. 4 “La casa del diavolo,” inspired by Gluck's ballet Don Juan. The variations on the famous fandango theme create a dramatic atmosphere that contrasts with the gracefulness of the other works in the program, offering a captivating theatrical dimension.
Conductors and soloists
Paul Agnew
ConductorAn internationally renowned performer, Paul Agnew is in constant demand as an exceptional interpreter of baroque and classical repertoire. His long-standing collaborations with leading conductors in the field of early music have resulted in a discography of over one hundred recordings. Born in Glasgow, he studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, before embarking on a career that has taken him around the world.
At the forefront of the revival of French baroque repertoire, Paul Agnew made a critically acclaimed debut singing the title role in Hippolyte et Aricie by Rameau at the Palais Garnier, conducted by William Christie. He has since returned to the Opéra national de Paris for new productions of Platée, Les Boréades, and Les Indes galantes by Rameau. He has performed the demanding haute-contre roles internationally, including at the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence, the Opernhaus Zürich, and in Sydney, Australia. His repertoire later expanded to include Idomeneo by Mozart under William Christie, Peter Quint in The Turn of the Screw by Britten at the Opéra national de Bordeaux under Jane Glover and at the Opéra de Rennes, L’anima del filosofo by Haydn with the Kammerorchesterbasel in Vienna and Eisenstadt, Jephtha by Haendel at the Det Kongelige Theater in Copenhagen, and Dialogues des Carmélites by Poulenc at the Opéra de Nice. Paul Agnew made his debut with the Royal Opera, Covent Garden, in their production of Acis and Galatea celebrating the 250th anniversary of Haendel’s death.
Following a highly successful debut conducting Les Arts Florissants in Paris in 2007, William Christie appointed him co-musical director of the ensemble. Since then, he has conducted the group on tours to major venues such as the Wiener Konzerthaus, throughout France, Salzburg, New York, and China. He made his London conducting debut with the ensemble at the Barbican as part of its 30th anniversary celebrations. Paul Agnew succeeded Christophe Rousset as music director of the Orchestre Français des Jeunes Baroque in 2009 and has since been actively involved in training the next generation of early music specialists. He is also co-director of the young singers’ academy Le Jardin des Voix.
Paul Agnew has conducted, among others, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra, the Trondheim Symfoniorkester, the Spanish National Orchestra, the Orchestre de l’Opéra de Saint-Étienne, Music of the Baroque in Chicago, the St Paul Chamber Orchestra in Minnesota, the Staatskapelle Dresden, and the Finnish Radio Chamber Orchestra in Helsinki.
He made his operatic conducting debut with Der Schauspieldirektor by Mozart at the Opéra de Rennes in 2010 and has since conducted Robert Carsen’s new production of Platée by Rameau at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna and at the Opéra Comique in Paris, Platée again at the Göteborg Opera and Garsington Opera, and Giulio Cesare at the Nationaltheater Mannheim.
As co-musical director of Les Arts Florissants, he led a Monteverdi recording series that won the Gramophone Award in 2014, and more recently completed a recording of Gesualdo’s six books of madrigals, which also received a Gramophone Award (2022) and was named Disque de l’année by Classica (2023). His extensive discography also includes Lamentazione (works by Scarlatti and Caldara) for Virgin, The Food of Love (Purcell program) for Ambroisie, In Dreaming by Sally Beamish for Virgin Classics, Dardanus by Rameau for ABC, and songs by Dowland for Metronome. On DVD, he has appeared in Les Boréades and Les Indes galantes (Opus Arte), Armide by Lully, Messe en si mineur and Passion selon saint Matthieu by Bach, as well as his celebrated performance of Platée (TDK).
Paul Agnew has been represented by RSBA since 2023.
Louis-Philippe Marsolais
HornA member of Pentaèdre since 2002, Louis-Philippe Marsolais’ exceptional technical mastery and musicality have brought inestimable richness to the ensemble.
Formerly Principal Horn with the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra, Associate Principal Horn with the Orchestre symphonique de Québec and Third Horn with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, Louis-Philippe Marsolais currently serves as Principal Horn with the Orchestre Métropolitain. A renowned recitalist, concert performer and chamber musician, he performs regularly throughout North America, Europe and Asia. A winner of three prizes at the prestigious Munich Competition in September 2005, he has also received numerous awards at international competitions, including the Geneva Competition, Mozart Competition in Rovereto and the Trévoux International Horn Competition.
As a soloist, he has performed on several occasions with the Montreal, Quebec, Trois-Rivières, Longueuil and Peterborough symphony orchestras, the Orchestre Métropolitain, Bavarian Radio Orchestra, the Munich, Geneva, Neuchâtel, Zürich and Montreal chamber orchestras, the Haydn Orchestra of Bolzano, Les Violons du Roy and the Société de musique contemporaine du Québec.
Louis-Philippe Marsolais has cultivated a special interest in contemporary music and has premiered several works by Canadian, Swiss, German and French composers for solo horn, horn and band or for chamber music ensemble. He is also Associate Professor at the Faculty of Music of Université de Montréal.
Program
Overture (Armida)
· Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-flat Major, K. 417
· Overture (La Betulia liberata, K. 118)
· Symphony No. 47 in G Major, Hob. I:47 The Palindrome
· Horn Concerto No. 2 in D Major, Hob. VIId:4
Symphony No. 4 in D Minor, Op. 12 La casa del diavolo
Other performance of the concert
Partners