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Dorn Music announces QCHAMBERSTREAM.COM

By April 9, 2020April 19th, 2020Uncategorized

Dorn Music presents new streaming channel for live chamber music- QCHAMBERSTREAM.COM

Dorn Music announces a new initiative – QChamberStream.com – Your home for quality chamber music streaming featuring cutting edge soloists and chamber ensembles in highest quality in your own living room. Bring the future of streamed concerts into your home.

Tickets for the online concert with Elisabeth Kufferath and Kiveli Dörken are sold at EUR 25 and help to secure musicians’ fees.

“Our new streaming channel QCHAMBERSTREAM.COM allows select soloists to perform live for an audience and for interested viewers to experience top quality concerts. In order to generate fees for the musicians, tickets for the live concert experience are sold at a price of EUR 25. I truly believe in a revival of chamber music and, together with our partners, we are already thinking about how to expand the format internationally. Given that we run an office in New York in addition to the one Hanover, it seems logical to continue there.” – Tanja Dorn, artist manager and founder of global artist management and production agency Dorn Music.

“Both the musical and the audiovisual quality enhance the viewer’s experience and subsequently, their willingness to remain with the stream. We work with the artists to simultaneously promulgate their music and create income opportunities.” – Bernhard Fleischer, producer of concert broadcasts.

Tickets are EUR 25 each at http://www.qchamberstream.com
Allowing the viewer to experience the concert once, either live on April 13 at 5 pm CET
or as catch-up on the streaming channel within the week after

April 13, 5 pm CET – LIVE from Villa Seligmann, House for Jewish Music in Hannover

Felix Mendelssohn: Sonata for Violin and Piano in F Minor, Op. 4

Luciano Berio: Sequenza VIII for Solo Violin

György Kurtág: from Signs, Games, and Messages
Hommage á J.S.B
Im Volkston
Doloroso
In Nomine-all’ongherese

Ernest Bloch: Solo Suite No. 1 for Violin

Johannes Brahms: Sonata in F Minor for Piano and Viola, Op. 120, No. 1

 

Elisabeth Kufferath on the program:

“For us musicians, music is the language of our souls. I am looking forward to playing next Monday with Kiveli Dörken, wonderful musician and a dear friend, and hope that many people will accept the online concert offer. I will donate my fee to musicians who are currently in economic difficulties. The program opens with the passionate sonata in F Minor by the very young Mendelssohn, then follows a series of my favorite pieces, all of which have their very own language: the Violin Sequence by Berio, which begins in wild turmoil and in a large musical arc finds a delicate, conciliatory end. Further some miniatures by Kurtág, which seem to harbor a whole world in every note, and Bloch’s first solo suite, rich in romantic harmonies and rhapsodic gestures. The program ends with a sonata in the dark, tragic key of F Minor, a late work by Johannes Brahms, in which the mood evolves from deep darkness to radiant light. A hopeful finale.”

“These times are both unprecedented and unpredictable. We are forced to completely rethink our habits. Simultaneously, there is a completely new awareness of how important music is to us as human beings — to the listener, but just as much to the performing musician. The opportunity to be in direct contact with an audience despite social distancing measures is invaluable. I am very grateful for this, and very happy to be performing for you on Monday evening with Elisabeth Kufferath.” – Pianist Kiveli Dörken

Project idea and execution: www.dornmusic.com
Film producer: www.bfmi.at
Streaming via: qchamberstream.com
Location: www.villa-seligmann.de

“As House of Jewish Music and Culture, the Villa Seligmann stands more than ever for open encounters, enriching connections, high-end performances and outstanding quality. In creative collaboration with our partners, we will be the venue for a new concert experience and will keep pace with a time that will increasingly be shaped by change.” – Eliah Sakakushev-von Bismarck, Director of Villa Seligmann.