Schumann Symphony No. 4 (1851 revision)
Ravel Piano Concerto in G Major
Ravel Boléro 

André de Ridder is known for crossover collaborations with the jazz and rock worlds – but he’s a dab hand at core repertoire, too, as you’ll hear when he takes on Schumann’s Fourth Symphony and Ravel’s Boléro.

The unconventional structure of Schumann’s Fourth so baffled audiences that he withdrew it for a full ten years before revising it. This later version better revealed the logic in Schumann’s boundary-pushing imagination. In comparison, Ravel’s Boléro was instantly popular, even though Ravel himself deemed it merely “an experiment  […] with no contrasts, and practically no invention.” 100 years of rapt audiences beg to differ!

Ravel’s Basque heritage is evident in both Boléro and his Piano Concerto in G major. With a chirpy opening piccolo tune mimicking the Basque folk recorder, this Concerto is undeniably fun listening. To this, Andrea Lam will bring the innate “subtle excellence of her modern piano performance […with] tasteful lyricism and beauty” (Sydney Arts Guide).

$2 per hour to a max of $12 on weekends and a $12 flat rate for weekday evenings at The Civic car park. Find out more

Last updated: 10 November 2023