JoAnn Falletta will be making her debut with the Orchestra of St Lukes at Carnegie Hall on Tuesday, December 10 in a program that features the music of the "Canadian Mozart", Andre Mathieu, performed by Alain Lefevre.
The program at 8 PM in Stern Auditorium is a fascinating one, featuring Canadian pianist Alain Lefèvre-champion of André Mathieu, the child prodigy known as "Canada's Mozart"-performing two of the composer's magnificent concerti in celebration of the 70th anniversary of Mathieu's last performance at Carnegie Hall. Mathieu's Concertino won the New York Philharmonic's Young Composers Contest in 1942, and the Piano Concerto No. 4, reconstructed by Lefèvre, will be heard for the first time in New York. The program also includes Mozart's Symphony No. 36 in C Major, K. 425 "Linz". Tickets are available through CarnegieHall.org. Mathieu's music is one of the forgotten, rarely heard gems of classical music. JoAnn has earned a reputation, through her recordings of music by Holocaust victim, Marcel Tyberg, among others, of programming and recording important works that have been forgotten or hidden rarely heard. The story of Mathieu's meteoric rise and tragic end as "Canada's Mozart" is the subject of the film L'enfant Prodige (The Child Prodigy), with music direction by Alain Lefèvre. Mathieu, born in 1929, began composing at the age of 4, and at age 7 performed his Concertino No.1 for Piano and Orchestra as a soloist on the CBC network. By age 12, Mathieu won the first prize at the composition competition to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. He also played his Concertino No. 2 for piano and orchestra at Carnegie Hall. As a young adult, he succumbed to alcoholism and died suddenly at the age of 39 in 1968.Videos