Tchaikovsky’s Fifth

Antonio Pompa-Baldi at the piano

Antonio Pompa-Baldi

ZHOU

A Thousand Years of Good Prayers

MENDELSSOHN

Piano Concerto No. 1

TCHAIKOVSKY

Symphony No. 5 in E minor

Matthew Troy

Matthew Troy, conductor
Antonio Pompa-Baldi, piano

Tickets:$15 – $62

Sunday, October 14, 2012 | 3:00
Stevens Center of the UNC School of the Arts

 

Sponsored By

Season Presenting Sponsor
Wells Fargo logo


Classics Series Co-Presenting Sponsors
Forsyth Medical Center logo Bell, Davis, & Pitt, P.A.


Conductor Sponsor
Franklyn Millman & Susan Von Cannon


Arts Council of Winston-Salem Forsyth County logo   City of Arts and Innovation logo   North Carolina Arts Council logo

Related Events

Maestro Moody, musicians, and guest artists discuss the concert with audience members after the show.

Post-Concert Q&A

Stay after the concert for an informal, ten- to fifteen-minute discussion featuring conductor, guest artists, and musicians of the orchestra. Q&A sessions occur after each Classics performance.

Music Lovers’ Luncheon

Friday, October 12, 2012
12:00pm
WSS associate conductor Matthew Troy and guest pianist Antonio Pompa-Baldi discuss this week’s program.

The Piedmont Club
200 W. Second Street
BB&T Financial Center, 19th Floor
Winston-Salem, NC 27101

Reservations Required. Please call the Piedmont Club at (336) 724-7077.
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Multimedia

Antonio Pompa-Baldi. Click to play YouTube video

On YouTube

Antonio Pompa-Baldi performs the third movement of Prokofiev’s third piano concerto; James Conlon conducts. Click the play button on the image above to view the video.

Listen & Learn

play Play 
Zhou Tian:
A Thousand Years of Good Prayers

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Felix Mendelssohn:
Piano Concerto No. 1
Movement 1 {0:29}

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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky:
Symphony No. 5
Movement 2 {0:29}

Biography

Antonio Pompa-Baldi at the piano

Antonio Pompa-Baldi

Born and raised in Foggia, Italy, Antonio Pompa-Baldi first came to the U.S. in 1999 to participate in the Cleveland International Piano Competition. He won the First Prize, and, while fulfilling all the engagements that came with it, he and his wife, Italian pianist Emanuela Friscioni, decided to make Cleveland their home.

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Program Notes

Tchaikovsky’s Fourth and Fifth Symphonies are separated by a hiatus of eleven years, during which time the composer underwent major personal crises, chief among them being his impetuous decision to wed Antonina Milyukova in 1877.

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Posted in Past Performances