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Arts Calendar / February 2 / Concerts
19:00 Javier Bonet and Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra
Sensual Spain welcomes us this night with passionate dances, vivid brushes of paint, and eyes full of love! The thing is that Oscar Navarro is the conductor of the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra this night. Navarro is a well-known Spanish composer and conductor. As composer, he became famous due to soundtracks; in 2014 Spanish Movie Academy nominated him for GOYA award for his music for the Mule. However, he also composes pieces in classical genre, and is demanded conductor. Navarro worked with quite a few orchestras and brass bands, how he is leader of his own Oscar Navarro Symphony Orchestra, too. He also runs a publishing company of his music. And on this night, two (!) pieces of his will be performed in Russia for the first time. The wonderful French horn of Javier Bonet is nothing new to the Russian audience. “The best thing about French horn”, as the musician explains, “is its magic sound, a kind of combination of human voice and cello. What I’m trying to do is not to think ‘I’m a horn player’, I’m musician! I should sing with the horn – that’s what I try to do”. Bonet coupled with the Tchaikovsky Symphony Orchestra is a real gift to Moscow audience, since it was “human” intonation of Tchaikovsky music that made the Orchestra famous.
Zaryadye Concert Hall 
19:00 Noa (Israel)
Known for her stylistically expansive sound, Noa is one of Israel's most internationally renowned singer/songwriters. Emerging in the early '90s, Noa came to prominence alongside her longtime collaborator, guitarist Gil Dor. Together, they gained acclaim for albums like 1994's Pat Metheny-produced Noa, and 2000's Blue Touches Blue, mixing '60s folk influences with jazz, classical, pop, and Noa's own Yemenite traditions. A truly international performer, Noa has recorded songs in a variety of languages including Hebrew, Arabic, English, Spanish, and Italian, the latter of which was the focus of 2006's Noapolis: Noa Sings Napoli. She has retained a global profile, often combining styles from various cultures as on her 2015's Love Medicine, which featured a Hebrew version of Brazilian singer/songwriter Gilberto Gil's "Peace," and 2019's Letters to Bach, which found her applying English and Hebrew lyrics to instrumental compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach.
Rachmaninov Concert Hall (Philharmonia-2) 
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