The most human music

Joaquim Uriach, president

From the Palau, we want to highlight the figure of the human being, of those individuals who every day, with their will and resilience, strive to improve our daily lives. Especially, we want to emphasize the value of those people behind the music.

The mission of the Orfeó Català-Palau de la Música Catalana Foundation is to enhance people's lives through culture and music, which holds a special significance in the times we live in today. We find ourselves in a moment where multiple paradigms related to our way of living are being questioned. These are times that make us aware of the importance of values such as sustainability, which, in the institution's new Strategic Plan, joins excellence, social commitment, Catalan identity, participation, and innovation.

Today, when it seems like artificial intelligence can do everything and new uncertainties and unforeseeable horizons are opening up before us, from the Palau, we want to highlight the figure of the human being, of those individuals who, every day, with their will and resilience, strive to improve our daily lives. Specifically, we want to acknowledge those behind the music – musicians, singers from our choirs, composers, performers, audiences, patrons, cultural workers who wake up every day with a purpose: to ensure that the musical cycle, like that of life, never ceases, allowing us to enjoy the best music night after night in this privileged environment that is the Palau de la Música Catalana. All these individuals are our heroes and heroines, human beings who contribute to improving our lives through music.

From the Palau and the Orfeó, through the implementation of the new Strategic Plan, we aim to increase the impact of our values throughout society. We want to reach a wider audience and expand our community so that everyone can feel the Palau as their own, by making it more accessible and sustainable.

Therefore, we present once again a new season with great figures from the international scene, promising young talents, a significant presence of the Orfeó Català choirs, local artists, and repertoires ranging from popular pieces to more contemporary ones. From the greatest hero to the most down-to-earth antihero, understanding that everyone is human, we showcase the diversity of human experience through music.

Heroism in music

Joan Oller, general director

The idea of the "character" who performs extraordinary actions, which is how a hero can be defined, has fascinated composers. But this same definition also applies to explain what musicians do: music, whether in the process of creation or interpretation, appears to us as an extraordinary activity, thus making musicians also heroes. This mythification contrasts with the real life of people who make music, with their difficulties, disappointments, and dilemmas regarding adverse environments. These very human situations often seem far removed from any heroism.

Heroism has been one of the favorite themes of music. Clear examples are Beethoven's Heroic Symphony or Richard Strauss's Ein Heldenleben. The idea of the "character who performs extraordinary actions," which is how a hero can be defined, has fascinated composers. But this same definition also applies to explain what musicians do: music, whether in the process of creation or interpretation, appears to us as an extraordinary activity, thus making musicians also heroes. This mythification contrasts with the real life of people who make music, with their difficulties, disappointments, and dilemmas regarding adverse environments. These very human situations often seem far removed from any heroism.

This 2024-25 season, we will explore the concept of heroism in music as a theme, also considering the life contexts of composers. Is it an act of heroism to stay and survive in an unjust and totalitarian regime as Shostakovich did, or is it to leave to denounce it from exile, as in the case of Stravinsky? Should we consider heroines the women composers and conductors who have suffered gender discrimination, hindering and even preventing the development of their talent? How do we currently experience this discrimination? The connection between the life and work of musicians opens up very interesting reflections.

Anniversaries also allow an approach to the life and work of the great creators, to make them better known to the public. In 2024, we commemorated the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the death of Josep Anselm Clavé, promoter of the Catalan choral movement.

And this season, we continue with the commemoration of the fifty years since Shostakovich's death, one of the greatest composers of the 20th century, the two hundred years since Anton Bruckner's birth, perhaps the least popular yet deepest among the romantic symphonists.

It is also the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the birth and the centenary of the death of Juli Garreta, a completely extraordinary case for the musical quality of his compositions, which he wrote in an almost self-taught manner, and the lack of interest in pursuing any kind of musical career (he was a watchmaker).

We also commemorate the anniversaries of Joan Lamote de Grignon (seventy-five years since his death) and his son Ricard Lamote de Grignon (one hundred and twenty-five years since his birth), both prestigious directors and composers repressed by Franco's regime.

Finally, we will celebrate a very special anniversary: the millennium of the foundation of the Montserrat Monastery, a fundamental institution in the history and music of Catalonia.

We have a very broad season in terms of the number of concerts and the variety of formats. We want it to be a showcase of the best of the international scene and at the same time an expression of support for local talent. We also want to rediscover the great works and help discover those that, although of quality, are less known or are of recent creation. Therefore, we present a very wide variety of interesting concerts to choose from. We hope you enjoy this season very much.

Hero or anti-hero, but always human

Mercedes Conde Pons, deputy artistic director

And what if the hero were the ordinary human being who lives life with authenticity, facing it and overcoming its vicissitudes? And what if the anti-hero did not have a negative connotation, but rather represented the human being who does not conform to convention and, in their dissent, seeks to transform the world with hints of a better horizon for all humanity?

One of the most recurring epithets in the history of humanity, which has given rise to a multitude of literature and philosophical texts, as well as visual representation, is that of the hero. Even today, heroism is a characteristic used to qualify extraordinary acts, supernatural powers, and abilities that do not conform to the ordinary human condition. Mythology, religion, and art history have recurrently employed a concept that is currently in crisis, although the concepts of "hero" and "anti-hero," its opposite, are more deliberately used than ever.

The history of music is full of heroes and anti-heroes; not only the fictional protagonists of many musical works, but also the composers themselves. But what if we change the focus and reconsider the concept with contemporary eyes? Then we can change the perspective and recognize in the essence of every human being the possibility of becoming a hero/heroine at some point in life, but also that of becoming an anti-hero.

And what if the hero were the ordinary human being who lives life with authenticity, facing it and overcoming its vicissitudes? And what if the anti-hero did not have a negative connotation, but rather represented the human being who does not conform to convention and, in their dissent, seeks to transform the world with hints of a better horizon for all humanity?

The Palau de la Música Catalana wants to shed light on artists who seek in their art an unconventional approach to the world. A vision of life and history that provides a tangential, enriching path with a renewed spirit. Therefore, we are pleased to present two guest composers with very different generational and cultural backgrounds: the Catalan Raquel García-Tomás and the American Steve Reich. García-Tomás joins the list of female composers that has been growing among guest composers over the last five seasons. García-Tomás represents the ability to see the human being with different eyes, as she has demonstrated in her operas.

On the other hand, Steve Reich is a veteran composer who, with his music, was a dissident sixty years ago. Revisiting some of his early works with current eyes and ears will be a reflective exercise of great impact.

Catalan performers and young ensembles are regular protagonists in the programs of the Palau. This year, the Trio Fortuny embarks on the second year of artistic residency with a focus on Shostakovich, marking the fiftieth anniversary of his death. And the Frames Percussion ensemble also begins a residency, with a special focus on projects featuring music by García-Tomás and Reich.

The Palau de la Música Catalana's connection with other arts continues to bear tasty fruit. Adela Beltran places women at the center of her painting, as heroines in a world still struggling for equality of rights and opportunities. Bill Armstrong, an American photographer, uses blur and color treatment to portray human figures in an archetypal manner.

We will also collaborate with private art institutions such as the Catalunya-La Pedrera Foundation or the Sorigué Foundation, and selected works will be temporarily exhibited in different spaces within the Palau.

Finally, in the realm of literature, poet Lluís Calvo will participate, challenging the concept of heroism in his poetry. And novelist Jordi Lara, a great connoisseur and advocate of Catalan music, will help us unravel the aura of mystery surrounding the composer Juli Garreta.

Music, as always, remains at the center of everything.

Presentation New Season 2024-25