About the event
Ensemble Dissonance with Repin and Laul
Ensemble Dissonance brings together leading Slovenian chamber musicians who explore flexible formations and connect canonical repertoire with contemporary works. They are joined by violinist Vadim Repin and pianist Peter Laul, both acclaimed international soloists and chamber performers. The program features works by Arensky, Tchaikovsky, Ravel, and Chausson, showcasing the expansion of chamber music into more expressive and complex forms.
Calendar
Interesting facts
ENSEMBLE DISSONANCE
- One of their key missions is to promote Ljubljana’s rich musical heritage and connect it with young performers and internationally renowned artists.
VADIM REPIN
- The legendary Yehudi Menuhin said of the young Repin that he was “simply the best and most perfect violinist that I have ever had the chance to hear”.
- During one of his visits to Slovenia, Repin was given the opportunity to play Tartini’s original violin at the National Museum. He described the instrument as “remarkable and full of history”, which for a musician who usually plays the most valuable Stradivari violins is a significant tribute to Slovenia’s musical heritage.
PETER LAUL
- Laul is one of the few pianists in the world to perform the complete cycle of 32 piano sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven. In a single year he performed the entire cycle in St Petersburg and Tartu, which critics described as a true athletic feat of the mind.
Performers
Soloists
Programme
More information
The Ensemble Dissonance brings together prominent Slovene chamber musicians who are active in the country’s main orchestras and as teachers and soloists. The ensemble, which has a flexible line-up, specialises in thoughtful juxtapositions of works from the canonical repertoire with more recent music and collaborates regularly with acclaimed soloists from Slovenia and abroad. Appearing with the ensemble on this occasion are violinist Vadim Repin, who established himself on the international scene at a very young age with victories at prestigious competitions and is today the artistic director of the Transsiberian Arts Festival, which he founded, and pianist Peter Laul, an acclaimed soloist and committed chamber musician with an extensive discography who is also active as a teacher and author, with publications including a book on Beethoven’s piano sonatas.
The programme brings together works from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a period in which chamber music was gradually expanding towards greater expressive and formal complexity. Anton Arensky conceived his Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky as a tribute to the recently deceased composer. The simple theme that opens the work is followed by a stylistically diverse series of transformations. Tchaikovsky himself is represented by a work that reveals his melodic invention and directness of expression. This is followed by a rhapsodic piece by Maurice Ravel featuring a virtuosic violin part in a stylised “gypsy” idiom. The second part of the evening ends with Ernest Chausson’s sumptuous and colourful Concert for Violin, Piano and String Quartet.
Accessibility for visitors with reduced mobility
Festival Ljubljana is committed to ensuring a welcoming and accessible experience at cultural events for persons with reduced mobility.
Selected venues offer designated wheelchair-accessible spaces as well as seating for accompanying persons. Wheelchair users can inquire about availability and reserve accessible seating by calling +386 (0)1 241 60 28 or emailing blagajna@ljubljanafestival.si.

Free rides on LPP city buses
Ticket holders for events within the 74th Ljubljana Festival are entitled to free rides on LPP city buses within two hours before the start and two hours after the end of each event.
