Sunday 12
February at 16:00 at Quintinha da Música, Mauro Dilema takes centre stage for our latest concert. Mauro
holds a professorship at the Conservatório at Évora where he teaches
piano. He also plays in concerts in various venues, and has recently
returned from playing concerts in Lithuania and Italy. His programme for
this concert includes the Sonata in B Minor by Liszt (composed in 1853);
the Chaconne by Bach-Busoni (written around 1720, and arranged in 1893);
and Four Last Seasons by Carrapatoso (from 2014). It is a balanced
programme from the eighteenth, nineteenth and twenty-first centuries, and
tilted towards the virtuosi of the nineteenth. These pieces demand high
technical skill as well as supreme musicianship. Reservations
through peterbooker1347@gmail.com at €25 per person.
Our next
concert will be on 2nd April, and features three Dutch pianists.
Friday 24 February at 11:00 in Tavira & Tuesday 28 February at 18:00 in Lagoa
Peter´s
February talk addresses the question, Was Salazar a fascist? When
Peter first spoke about Salazar some 16 years ago, the talk provoked an
interesting reaction. He was heckled with the exclamation the Salazar was
a fascist, and therefore he was a enemy of the people, and he could not
possibly have governed for their good. António de Oliveira Salazar became
Minister of Finance in 1928, President of the Council of Ministers in 1932, and
left government in 1968 after a near-fatal accident. He was in government
office continuously for 40 years, an extraordinary accomplishment. It is
true that he maintained on his desk a photograph of Mussolini, at least until
1943. But how did Salazar manage to maintain his grip on power?
Should we see his long period in government as a democratic success? As
an authoritarian success? Did he use fascist methods to gain office, or to
retain power for so long? Peter discusses these themes as well as the reasons
to see some positives from his time in government.