Anne-Sophie Mutter debuts in Lucerne (1976, with her brother Christoph at the keyboard) © Georg Anderhub/Lucerne Festival
Anne-Sophie Mutter debuts in Lucerne (1976, with her brother Christoph at the keyboard) © Georg Anderhub/Lucerne Festival
Marking her 50th anniversary on the Lucerne stage

Performers

  • Anne-Sophie Mutter violin
  • Roman Patkoló double bass
  • Oleksandra Fedosova piano
  • Sebastian Nordmann Executive and Artistic Director

Program

11.00
Marking her 50th anniversary on the Lucerne stage:
Anne-Sophie Mutter meets with Sebastian Nordmann (in German)

This Conversation has no intermission and ends around 12.00.

Description

How time flies! Anne-Sophie Mutter was just 13 when she made her Lucerne Festival debut on 23 August 1976. At St. Charles Hall in Meggen, she performed works by Tartini, Bach, de Falla, Paganini, and de Sarasate — accompanied by her brother Christoph at the piano. Her debut was so sensational that she became the talk of the town for days. Word even reached the great Herbert von Karajan. He invited her to play for him, was instantly captivated, and invited the young Anne-Sophie to perform with the Berliner Philharmoniker. So it was in Lucerne that her international career began — and she has remained loyal to Lucerne ever since, giving 50 concerts over the course of 50 years. She has even been serving on the Festival’s Board of Trustees in recent years. On the exact day of her golden anniversary — and on the historic site where it all began — Anne-Sophie Mutter, in conversation with Executive and Artistic Director Sebastian Nordmann, looks back on a half-century during which she has made musical history. But there is more on the agenda: the future of classical music and of the Festival, and her commitment to fostering exceptional young talent. The double bassist Roman Patkoló, whom Anne-Sophie Mutter formerly supported through her foundation, will provide the musical framing.


Event Venue

St. Charles Hall Meggen

Benzeholzstrasse 41
6045 Meggen

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