Saturday, November 10, 2007

“Can I call you back? I’m conducting the Berlin Philharmonic”

Memo from Berlin

Orchesterfest
Berliner Philharmoniker
125th Anniversary Season
November 4, 2007


A.J. Goldmann

BERLIN

The Berlin Philharmonic and its musical director Sir Simon Rattle perform near-consistently to a sold-out house. For visitors to Berlin, the quest for tickets can often be either futile or very costly. Earlier this week, however, the Philharmonic was giving great music away, completely free of charge.

This past Sunday, over 4000 people attended the nonstop music marathon Orchesterfest, part of the orchestra’s 125th-anniversary season. The curious, the initiated and the fanatical crowed inside Hans Scharoun’s celebrated Philharmonie to experience a long and varied program that ranged from Vivaldi to Henze, with everything in between.

The Berlin Philharmonic will continue its anniversary celebrations next week in New York as part of Carnegie Hall’s Berlin in Lights Festival. Many of the ensembles that took part in the Orchesterfest will also be playing at Carnegie. The 12 Cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic, for example, performed several works that will also be featured in their November 12th program at Zankel Hall.

The festival featured a steady rotation of half-hour-long concerts in all the complex’s three concert-halls – the main hall, the chamber music hall and the recital hall. The programming revolved around three themes: music that had been in the repertoire of the Philharmonic from its founding in 1882 onwards, such as Wagner, Brahms and Tchaikovsky; n the second was music that had either been composed or arranged especially for the orchestra’s various ensembles and music considered “degenerate” by the “Third Reich.”
 
One concert in the Hermann Wolf Recital Hall, “Cabaret in Theresienstadt” performed music that Jewish camp inmates cultivated as a survival strategy. This focus had a link to the orchestra’s ongoing investigation into the Philharmonic under the Nazi regime.

All told, there were nearly 30 open seating concerts to choose from over a nine-hour-long period. The tightly packed program went a bit awry here and there, but everyone was back on schedule for the closing concert by Sir Simon and the Philharmonic.

Towards the beginning of the day, the crowd control was rather difficult to maintain. The concerts were so tightly scheduled that there was scarcely time to break between performances.

Outside the main hall the lines to enter were especially long.

The usher at the Hermann Wolff Recital Hall was apologetic as she turned people away from a 2:00pm concert of Spanish music. She said that the turnout had been greater than expected and confessed that whatever crowd control was going on was pretty much improvised.

Surprisingly, tourists did not predominate. There were many families with young children and the Philharmonic even provided a daycare service.

Aaron Beasley, 24, a recent graduate of the New School, appreciated how much of a family event it was. “I like seeing parents change baby diapers in the corner and kids running all over the place. It’s great. You certainly wouldn’t find this in New York.”

Platinum blond youngsters listened fidgeted in their seats. One five-year-old girl did an interpretive finger dance to Brahms’ String Sextet in G.  At other concerts, periodic shrieks and the crying of babes was amplified by the hall’s miraculous acoustics.

There were many children present for the 3:30pm performance of Mozart’s Divertimento in F, “A Musical Joke” in the main hall. The world-famous clown Dimitri joined the musicians of Divertimento Berlin onstage, and caused all sort of mischief during the performance, pulling rats out of the horns and balancing a cello bow on his nose. Laughter and applause erupted in the packed hall and people leaned over railings and against walls.

A much lesser known divertimento for piano and contrabass by the film-score composer Nino Rota played to capacity in the recital hall. The pianist Rhodri Clarke was pleasantly surprised by the large turnout for such an obscure work.

Over at the Chamber Music Hall, string quartets by Schubert and Beethoven were prefaced by Hans Werner Henze’s gripping “Being Beauteous” for soprano, harp and four cellos. The powerhouse soprano Anna Prohaska sang the killer role with expressiveness and accuracy. The challenging piece claimed its causalities but also attracted newcomers, who exited and entered the hall in the casual yet respectful atmosphere.

Leading up to the final concert, the Ensemble Berlin performing a chamber arrangement of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. Scored economically for winds, strings and a horn, it had a warm, clear and transparent quality that was a welcome departure from Ravel’s famous orchestration.

The full orchestra regrouped in the main hall at 8:30pm for The Rite of Spring, which was preceded by dances from Shostakovich’s ballet The Golden Age, a work whose introduction was heard at the opening concert.

Dimitri the Clown followed Sir Simon onstage and stole his tuxedo jacket. Dimitri reached into the pocket and handed the conductor his phone.  Sir Simon dashed out to take the call and Dimitri assumed the podium. The comedy ended and Sir Simon returned – sans phone – for an incisive and adrenaline-pumping account of the Stravinsky. Even after a long day of music making, the orchestra was fresh as a daisy.
Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 16:51:41 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Squatluck Photos

Quadrangle

Over the weekend I found myself at a potluck dinner of sorts at a WG in Neukölln that models itself after a squat: hence, the neologism.

Please check out a selection of B&W images from that evening at my photography blog, Theater of Desire.

Enjoy!

-Adam
Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 02:39:29 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, November 02, 2007

Feuilleton Blogring Update

I apologize if things have been somewhat sleepy here in the past week or so. However, there is much that is worthy of your time and consideration on the other sites on the New York Feuilleton Blogring.

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Firstly, on To the Vexed, Voracious and Voluptious, we have a new short-story in the ongoing series "The World Turned Upside Down."

Aeroplane

Then, check out Theater of Desire for a photo gallery from Berlin's innovative museum for contemporary art, The Hamburger Bahnhof.

http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/exhibits/treasures/images/joyce.gif

Finally, two more essays have been posted to Bilderverbot, perhaps the first-ever blog devoted to aesthetics. The first one deals with Wagnerian imagery at the climax of James Joyce's Ulysses. The second is a reading of Henry James' "The Figure in the Carpet" which uses Roland Barthes' "Le Plaisir du Texte."
Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 14:57:16 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Mahler and the Music of Our Time

Here's a link to an article that ran in the Arts + section of the New York Sun this past Tuesday about a program at the Berlin Philhamonic that explores Mahler's late symphonies in conjunction with works by contemporary composers.

By A.J. GOLDMANN
October 30, 2007

BERLIN — Once ignored and even reviled by critics and audiences, the symphonies of Gustav Mahler (1860–1911) have established themselves in the standard repertoire. And now they are inspiring a new generation of composers...

READ COMPLETE STORY

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 15:25:30 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Spreewaldplatz

One of the most forceful suggestions I've recieved for this blog is to spend less time pontificating about Hochkultur and more time just providing a sense of what my day-to-day life here is like. In that spirit, I am posting assorted images of my residence at Spreewaldplatz 14, in Kreuzerg and of the square immediately outside my window. The room itself is in the process of being furnished.

The desk you see by the window hails from a second-hand shop around the corner that sells quality stuff at reasonable prices (and even provides delivery).

The coat-rack, mirror, glass nighttable and preposterously elegant lamp all come from this wonderful junk emporium about 1 km from my apartment on the cusp between Kreuzberg and Neukölln. It is a veritable treasure trove of oddities and practical items, and the owner, a Turk named Ali, prices nearly everything under 5 Euros.


So, here are pictures of my 22 square meter room

 



And here are pictures of Spreewaldplatz



Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 12:59:33 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |