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Would you say that Antonín Dvořák composed nine symphonies? Then you might be curious to explore the “Tenth,” which Jakub Hrůša presents in this concert. Under the title Nature - Life - Love, Dvořák combined three concert overtures into a symphonic triptych in which poetry, musical exuberance, and drama converge. In Nature’s Realm greets us with bird calls, while in Carnival we are plunged into the tumult of a festival and in Othello we relive the famous love story that ends with a drama of tragic jealousy. Hrůša, who was named “Conductor of the Year 2023” by Opus Klassik, has become a Lucerne audience favorite since he bravely took over last minute when Riccardo Chailly became indisposed. Last summer, he delighted concertgoers leading the Vienna Philharmonic in his enthralling interpretation of Dvořák’s Eighth Symphony, making it sound at once gentle and exuberant, nonchalant and profound. Hrůša once remarked that Dvořák is like mother’s milk to him. Sheku Kanneh-Mason, who launches his residency as “artiste étoile” with Dvořák’s heavenly Cello Concerto, will also benefit from this deep connection.