ZRI: Schubert at the Red Hedgehog Tavern (Double Bill)
Quintet ZRI reimagine Franz Schubert’s String Quintet in C to sound as radical as when it was first written.
Bursting with folk and Hungarian themes, it is rescored here to include clarinet, santouri (cymbalom) and accordion, and is interleaved with traditional tunes.
The group takes its name from ‘Zum Roten Igel’, or ‘The Red Hedgehog’, the name of the major concert venue in Vienna in Schubert’s time – but also of the tavern just behind it, where bands played and composers caroused into the night; at one point, Schubert even lived next door.
His fluid embrace of folk tradition in this much-loved work is brought out in this exciting version, reflecting the daring and profound qualities of the piece itself.
The connections between Schubert and gypsy music may not always be clear to audiences now, but they were strongly felt in his own time. The Hungarian elements in the String Quintet and parts of the Winterreise have been noted ever since they were written; Schubert also wrote a Divertissement à la hongroise and there is a catalogue of other works that seem to reflect this style. His first devotees understood this, and there is even a romanticised 19th-century picture of him sitting and writing out the music in the countryside.
Schubert recognised the height of his own romantic aspirations in the see-saw between virtuoso abandon and deep pathos of gypsy music, and also the alienation and defiance that it represented.
In this performance, the artists’ aim is to attempt to go through the looking glass to present the much-loved String Quintet in the full glory of its radicalism and originality.
Performers
Zum Roten Igel (ZRI)
Max Baillie violin
Matthew Sharp cello
Ben Harlan clarinet
Jon Banks accordion
Iris Pissaride santour (hammered dulcimer)
Repertoire
Schubert: String Quintet in C, D.956 rescored to include clarinet, santour & accordion and interleaved with traditional tunes
Need to know
Tickets give you access to this event as well as After Dark: ZRI – Cellar Sessions in the Queen Elizabeth Hall Foyer at 10.30pm.
Find out more about the music with our free programme.
View the programme
For your visit
This event is held at the Purcell Room Southbank Centre
The Purcell Room is located in the Queen Elizabeth Hall, which is open from 90 minutes before events start until they finish. It’s closed at all other times.
Plan your visit
The Purcell Room is an auditorium located within our Queen Elizabeth Hall.
Getting here
Our address is Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London, SE1 8XX.
The nearest tube stations to us are Waterloo and Embankment; Waterloo is also the nearest train station. And more than 20 different London bus routes pass within 500 metres of our venues. More information on getting here by rail, road or river is available on our Getting here page.
We’re cash-free
Please note that we’re unable to accept cash payments across our venues.
Access
We’re working hard to remove barriers, so that our facilities and events can be accessible to as many people as possible.
All help points, toilets, performance and exhibition spaces at the Southbank Centre are accessible to all, as are the cafes, bars and restaurants. We also have excellent public transport links with step-free access.
All information about booking wheelchair spaces, step-free access, blue badge parking, access maps and guides and other help available whilst you’re here, including details about our Access Scheme, can be found on our Access page.
Food & drink
From coffee to cocktails, filling favourites to fine dining, plus some of London’s best street food – it’s all here at the Southbank Centre.