Royal Concert Hall
Vienna Tonkünstler Orchestra
Friday 4 February 2011
7.30pm
Estimated finishing time: 9.25pm
Prices
Stalls £27, £24, £19, £16
Tier1 £32, £27
Tier2 £27, £24, £16, £10
Tickets subject to a credit/debit card booking fee.
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Nottingham Classics Subscription Scheme
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Book for 14 concerts and save 30% off all ticket purchases.
Book for 12-13 concerts and save 25% off all ticket purchases.
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Group Saver Tickets
Make a big night out of it with your friends and save pounds when you book as a group.
Save 20% on all full price tickets if you book as a party of 10 or more (excludes £6.50 & £9 seats).
Save 30% on all full price tickets if you book as a party of 40 or more (excludes £6.50 & £9 seats).
To make your group booking (and for more information about group booking schemes) please call the box office.
Family Saver Tickets
A family ticket costs just £50 for up to 4 people (maximum of 2 adults and £5 for each additional child). You'll also get a free programme.
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If you're under 25 then you can hear any Nottingham Classics concert for just £5. To join the scheme, fill in the form online at www.nottinghamclassics.org.uk/go_classics.
Bargain Seats
These are available in the choir stalls at £6.50 on the evening of the concert and can be purchased from 5.30pm onwards. Please note that when the choir seats are in use (12 March) bargain seats will be available elsewhere in the hall.
NB: Dates, times, prices, artists and programmes are correct at time of going to press but may be subject to later alteration.
Andrés Orozco-Estrada conductor
Natasha Paremski piano
Weber Overture: Oberon
Brahms Piano Concerto No.1
Beethoven Symphony No.7
Weber’s Oberon Overture provides a magical opener to this concert of Romantic classics, performed by one of Austria’s leading orchestras. Brahms’s 1st Piano Concerto is an undisputed heavyweight, storming and stressing at the beginning, meditative at its heart and fiercely triumphant at the end. Natasha Paremski, who made such a big impression here in 2009, steps up to the Steinway once again.
The impact of Beethoven’s 7th Symphony was so great, when it was first performed, that the concert had to be repeated to meet the demand. Two hundred years later it’s still impossible to deny its athletic energy. Even in its quieter moments the spirit of the dance is never far away, and the finale really takes off, propelled by leaping rhythms and gravity-defying horns.
TICKETS ON GENERAL SALE MONDAY 2 AUGUST

