Important information
People younger than 25 and older than 65 and retirees can buy tickets at a reduced price: 7 €, 16 €, 24 €, 30 € at the Križanke Box Office, upon presentation of an ID or pension card.
The 8th Winter Festival will open with the monumental War Requiem by the English composer Benjamin Britten. Scored for choirs, soloists and orchestra, it is considered one of the most convincing and emotionally charged works of the twentieth century. It was written for the consecration of the new Coventry Cathedral, built to replace its fourteenth-century predecessor, which was destroyed by bombing in the Second World War. The War Requiem juxtaposes the text of the Latin Requiem Mass with extra-liturgical poems by the English war poet Wilfred Owen, offering a vivid portrayal of the horrors of the front in the First World War. Britten combined these elements together into an expressive and powerful work. A committed pacifist, Britten created an important anti-war message with this work, one that still resonates today in a world that is once again torn by wars.
The War Requiem will be performed by the Slovenian Philharmonic Orchestra, the resident orchestra of the 2025 Ljubljana Festival, conducted by the legendary maestro Charles Dutoit, a frequent visitor to the Slovenian capital. The soloists will be Nadezhda Pavlova, a multiple award winning soprano who has won critical plaudits for her flawless bel canto, tenor Ian Bostridge, an acknowledged Britten specialist, and acclaimed baritone Matthias Goerne, known both for his performances on the opera stage and for his studio recordings. The Slovenian Philharmonic Choir will be joined by the Kaunas State Choir from Lithuania, distinguished by its artistic quality and rigorous approach and frequently entrusted with premiere performances of new works, and the famous Wiener Sängerknaben, founded in the thirteenth century.
- the War Requiem is a direct musical mirror of Britten’s pacifism, to which he adhered throughout his life; his aim in this composition was not simply to glorify the British soldiers who had died for their country; rather, he dedicated the work to all victims of war
- for the first performance, he deliberately chose soloists from different countries: German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Russian soprano Galina Vishnevskaya and British tenor Peter Pears; in this way, he hoped to unite more closely in efforts for peace those countries that, decades earlier, had fought each other in the greatest slaughter the world had ever seen
- at the Ljubljana Winter Festival, we will hear the War Requiem exactly as Britten intended it, at the insistence of conductor Charles Dutoit
- the work combines the text of the Latin Mass for the Dead with heart-rending poems about the senselessness of war by the English poet Wilfred Owen, who experienced the horrors of the First World War as a soldier and was killed in action at the age of 25 just a week before the armistice was signed on 11 November 1918
Important information
More dates
February
Friday
Benjamin Britten: WAR REQUIEM
CHARLES DUTOIT, conductor
SLOVENIAN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA AND CHOIR
KAUNAS STATE CHOIR
WIENER SÄNGERKNABEN
NADEZHDA PAVLOVA, soprano
IAN BOSTRIDGE, tenor
MATTHIAS GOERNE, baritone
6.00 pm
Cankarjev dom