«Κονσέρτο ενός παράδοξου κόσμου»
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| Date | Friday 4 December |
|---|---|
| Time | 20:00 |
| Price | €15 |
| Tickets | Buy tickets |
| Venue | Θέατρο ΕΛΕΡ (Plaka) |
| Address | Frynichou 10, Athens 105 58 |
The stage setup tells you something's off. A piano. A cello. A screen with images that might be from memory, or fever, or a dream someone's trying to explain to a stranger. Then the music starts—and it's not what you expected.
"Κονσέρτο ενός παράδοξου κόσμου" (Concerto of a Paradoxical World) pairs live classical performance with film projection, creating a narrative that exists in the space between sound and image. The ensemble treats the projection like another instrument—not illustrating the music, but having a conversation with it. This is concert-theater: high technical craft deployed to ask questions rather than answer them.
Yiannis Angelakis's ensemble brings precision and risk. The cello phrases complicate what you're seeing. The piano suggests memories that don't match the visuals. It's disorienting on purpose.
You'll sit with people who follow classical music here, plus experimentalists who track multimedia work, plus first-timers who just saw the title and sensed something interesting. The crowd contains multitudes—but they share one thing: attention. This room doesn't support partial listening.
The experience unfolds like a piece being assembled in real time. First act establishes the paradox (sound and image disagreeing). Second act deepens the mystery (you stop trying to reconcile them and start following each separately). By intermission, you're inside a different frame of consciousness. Final movement resolves nothing, which is exactly the point.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Setting** | Θέατρο ΕΛΕΡ, 280-seat theater, professional concert staging | | **Vibe** | Intellectual, elegant, slightly unsettling, composed | | **Format** | Piano, cello, projection, contemporary classical, ~70 minutes | | **Doors** | Standard, some reserved seating |
If you need a clear story or a resolve that feels earned through familiar dramatic beats, this work will frustrate you. The paradox is the point. But if you want to sit inside active confusion—if you trust a composer more than conventional narrative—this is precisely calibrated for you.