Ρεσιτάλ Φλάουτου
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Σάββατο 7 Μαρτίου |
|---|---|
| Τιμή | €25 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | Ωδείο Αθηνών (Ilisia) |
| Διεύθυνση | Rigillis & Vasileos Georgiou B' 17-19, Athens 106 75 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
The hall seats two hundred and forty, and from the back row you can still read the expression on the pianist's hands. The Philippos Nakas Concert Hall on Ippokratous street is purpose-built for this scale of performance — two storeys of acoustically tuned space where a flute's breath register carries without amplification. The seats fill quietly. No one is checking their phone.
Christina Bali is a flutist from Thessaloniki now studying at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague under Jeroen Bron. She has performed as soloist with the Thessaloniki Municipal Symphony Orchestra and worked with the State Orchestra of Thessaloniki and the MOYSA Youth Symphony. Her program for this recital spans three centuries and two continents of flute writing: Bach and Mozart anchor the classical core, Georges Hue's Fantaisie brings the late-Romantic French school — a Paris Conservatory showpiece composed in 1913 for flautist Adolphe Hennebains — and Theodoros Antoniou, the Greek composer who taught at Boston University for decades, closes the circle. Antoniou's flute works often draw from Mani funeral laments, folding raw regional grief into contemporary form. It is a program that traces where the Western flute has been and where Greek composition has taken it.
This recital is part of the 37th cycle of "Oi Neoi gia tous Neous" (Young for Young), a long-running series at the Nakas Conservatory that gives emerging classical performers a proper concert hall stage. The audience reflects this: conservatory students comparing technique, teachers who have followed the series for years, older classical regulars who come for every Saturday recital regardless of the program, and a handful of people who simply walked past the open doors on Ippokratous and decided to sit down.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Setting** | Purpose-built recital hall, 240 seats, acoustically tuned for unamplified performance | | **Vibe** | Attentive, unhurried, academic warmth | | **Sound** | Concert flute and piano, no amplification — every breath audible | | **Door** | Open entry, no reservation needed |
Chrysa Grenda accompanies on piano. The recital unfolds the way a well-built program should: Bach's formal architecture first, Mozart's melodic conversation between flute and keyboard, then the shift — Hue's Fantaisie opens with a cadenza passage before settling into its lyrical middle section, and the Antoniou work takes the instrument somewhere the earlier composers never imagined. The contrast is the point. You hear the same instrument speak four different languages in a single evening.
If you need spectacle, volume, or a late-night atmosphere, a Saturday evening recital in a conservatory hall is not that. But if you want to hear a young performer working through repertoire that stretches from the Baroque to contemporary Greek composition, in a room where the acoustics do the work and the entry is open, this is a rare Saturday evening in Exarcheia.
The Nakas Concert Hall sits above the Nakas music store on Ippokratous, a five-minute walk from Panepistimio metro. Doors open before 19:00. The hall fills from the front — arrive early if you want to watch the flutist's fingering up close. Seating is unassigned. The Exarcheia neighbourhood around the venue has no shortage of places to eat before or after, and Ippokratous itself is one of the calmer streets in the area.
A 240-seat hall, open entry, and a flutist who has already soloed with an orchestra — the 37th year of this series keeps finding performers worth the walk up the stairs.