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A Hopeless Case? The Misunderstood Genius of Modest Mussorgsky

  • Cadogan Hall 5 Sloane Terrace, London SW1X 9DQ SW1X 9DQ (map)

Mussorgsky (orch. Rimsky-Korsakov) - Night on a Bare Mountain
Mussorgsky (orch. Shostakovich) - Songs and Dances of Death
Mussorgsky (orch. Ravel) - Pictures at an Exhibition

Ossian Huskinson - Bass-baritone
Charles Sobry - Narrator
Peter Ash - Conductor

Odyssey Festival Orchestra’s band of talented musicians, aged 18–30, continues to refresh the concert-going experience with a programme that explores the career of composer Modest Mussorgsky.

Mussorgsky was the tortured genius of 19th-century Russian music. A visionary and iconoclast, he was also a nervous outsider, awkward and misunderstood. Haunted by death, he died impoverished, aged only 42.

Using his own words and those of his Russian contemporaries, the programme will explore what made Mussorgsky so brilliantly original and why composers like Rimsky-Korsakov, Shostakovich and Ravel felt drawn into re-arranging his compositions.

The concert features performances of three of his most famous works, conducted by Odyssey’s Artistic Director, Peter Ash.

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17 September

No-one understood

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7 May

Ossian’s Shadow: How the Idea of Scotland seized the European Romantic Imagination