Classical hour. Enigma Variations
Classical hour. Enigma Variations
One day in England in the autumn of 1898, Edward Elgar sat down at his piano and began improvising on a simple theme whose first four notes spell out the rhythmic shape of his own name. Soon, encouraged by his wife Alice, Elgar began to adapt the theme to fit the personalities of his closest friends and colleagues. By February the following year, Elgar had finished what many consider to be his masterpiece. The Enigma Variations, a set of fourteen portraits of human companions beginning with Alice and ending with Elgar himself, is a work of astonishing craftsmanship, invention, expressive range and emotional power.
Conducting sensation and born communicator Maxim Emelyanichev conducts Elgar’s score while discussing all the secrets of its hidden messages, inner connections, thematic links and evocative instrumentation. But can he solve the riddle of the final ‘Enigma’ – the ‘dark saying’ that Elgar decreed ‘must be left unguessed’?