Home » Entertainment » Concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden: This young soprano shows her class – Schramberg & the surrounding area

Concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden: This young soprano shows her class – Schramberg & the surrounding area

Concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden: This young soprano shows her class – Schramberg & surroundings – Schwarzwälder Bote

Concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden This young soprano shows her class

(red/pm) November 5th, 2024 – 12:24 p.m

Hannah Schmid will be heard as a soloist at both concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden. Photo: music school

The music school’s symphony orchestra will conclude its autumn work phase with two concerts in Schramberg and Aichhalden on Saturday, November 9th and Sunday, November 10th.

In these “Schubertiads”, as the term suggests, only works by Franz Schubert are played.

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According to the announcement, the concert will be opened by the 40-piece orchestra with the seventh symphony, B minor, by Schubert. This symphony is also nicknamed the “Unfinished” because Franz Schubert only left an incomplete manuscript of this composition. Nevertheless, this two-movement symphony seems quite viable and musically complete.

Beethoven, the benchmark in symphonic music at the time, has a counterpart in Schubert’s “Unfinished”, which is not only seen as a link between classical and romantic music, but is also celebrated as one of the most popular pieces of music of the 19th century.

Embedded in two orchestral pieces, the young soprano Hannah Schmid from Winzeln will perform the well-known “Ave Maria” by Schubert. She has been a student in Claudia Habermann’s singing class since 2017. In 2023 she took part in the project “Junghans – The Musical” and received the Trumpf Laser sponsorship award in the fall of the same year. On the clarinet, the soloist is very connected to her hometown club, the Winzeln Music Association.

Management by Meinrad Löffler

With one of Schubert’s most famous orchestral works, the “Rosamunde Overture”, the symphony orchestra under the direction of Meinrad Löffler brings the Schubertiade to a close. Schubert always hoped for a successful opera or theater production, but this never happened. This was probably mainly due to the mediocre libretti he had available. Audiences and critics were mostly enthusiastic about Schubert’s music.

The concert dates are on Saturday, November 9th, in the Protestant town church of Schramberg and on Sunday, November 10th, in the Catholic church of St. Michael Aichhalden. Both concerts start at 6 p.m. Admission is free, donations are requested.

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