The Église de Verbier hosts morning, afternoon and evening concerts. It is the Verbier Festival’s primary venue for solo, chamber music and vocal recitals.
Roman Borisov, piano
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E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.
You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).
Verbier Festival 2021
The Verbier Festival, now in its 28th year, announces its return for 17 days of concerts, masterclasses, talks and education events in the picturesque setting of the Swiss Alps.
The young, multiple prize-winning pianist and 2019 Verbier Festival Academy alumnus, Roman Borisov, performs an array of compositions that demonstrate his brilliant artistry, including Bach, Brahms, Chopin and Prokofiev.
Published in 1735, Bach’s Italian Concerto is a genius recreation of an orchestral concerto, colourfully differentiating between the solo and tutti sections on a single keyboard instrument. The recreation going on in Chopin’s Ballades is of a loosely programmatic nature, Chopin having claimed they were inspired by the literary ballades of his Polish countryman, Adam Mickiewicz. The fourth and final Ballade in melancholic F minor is the longest, requiring immense poeticism alongside lightly worn virtuosity. Brahms’s four late-career Klavierstücke Op. 119 open in equally introverted, melancholic mood, although they move to a more vigorous conclusion. The lyrical, bell-like writing of Prokofiev’s Piano Sonata No. 7‘s central Andante is then bookended by an urgent Allegro inquieto and a racing ‘Precipitato’ toccata.