Monday, May 11, 2009

Berlin Opera - 2009 - 2010

The three opera houses here made their upcoming seasons public in late April. As much as I’d like to believe that the opera scene is impervious to the worldwide financial fiasco, the scaled-down nature of the upcoming seasons gives pretty strong evidence to the contrary. Both the Staatsoper unter den Linden and the Deutsche Oper Berlin will be presenting four new productions, down from six and seven respectively this season. Ironically - or at least unexpectedly - the Komische Oper Berlin, which receives the fewest subsidies of the three houses, has seven premieres planned for the 2009 / 2010 season…an audacious move in this economic climate. Further to that, I just discovered on the KOB’s website that they’ll be upgrading the seats in the baroque auditorium to become Berlin’s first opera house with individual subtitles. Interested parties can purchase the old opera seats for 50 Euros a piece (discount available for bulk orders). Here’s your chance to own a piece of opera history! Contact  rausdamit@komische-oper-berlin.de to place an order…today!

The Staatsoper will be undergoing a thorough renovation in 2011 that’s set to last at least three years. This fact might explain why their final full season pre-renovation is so “light.”Among the premieres, Federico Tiezzi’s production of Simon Boccanegra with Placido Domingo in the title role seems the some promising, as well as Dale Duesing’s staging of Chabrier’s L’Etoile, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle and starring Magdalena Kozena.

Many productions from the 2008/2009 season will appear in rep. None of the revivals seems overly exciting, except a dream Tristan with Waltraud Meier, Peter Sieffert and Rene Pape.

At the DOB, what seems most intriguing at this point is Intendantin Kirsten Harms’ new production of Die Frau ohne Schatten, which arrives in late September with Manuela Uhl, Doris Soffel and Robert Brubaker, Johan Reuter and Eva Johansson. News of this production is especially welcome after the Met decided to scrap their FroSch from next season’s schedule for financial reasons.

I’m also excited for the new Rienzi by Philipp Stölzl that will be presented during the Richard Wagner Festival Weeks during the winter (Nov - Feb), which will feature all of Wagner’s 10 other biggies - including yet another revival of Götz Friedrich’s weathered production of Der Ring des Nibelungen.

I guess that leaves the KOB, whose season includes a new Rigoletto by Barrie Kosky and Aribert Riemann’s Lear in a production by Hans Neuenfels.

Below is a list of all the new productions at each house (concert perfs not included):

-Deutsche Oper Berlin-

Die Frau ohne Schatten - R. Strauss

Barbiere di Siviglia - Rossini

Rienzi - Wagner

Otello - Verdi

-Deutsche Staatsoper unter den Linden-

Simon Boccanegra - Verdi

Fledermaus - J. Strauss

Agrippina - Handel

L’etoile - Chabrier

- Komische Oper Berlin -

Rigoletto - Verdi

Der Rote Zora - Naske

Lear - Riemann

Don Pasquale - Donizetti

Fidelio  - Beethoven

Orlando - Handel

La Périchole - Offenbach

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 11:37:03 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Berlin Opera in Review: Strauss & Gounod

Here’s a quartet of reviews of from the current edition of Opera News. (www.operanews.com)

BERLIN — Ariadne auf Naxos, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 2/19/09


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How about taking the most meta-opera out there and making it even more self-referential? That’s the approach director Robert Carsen took when his vision of Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos unfurled in February at Deutsche Oper Berlin (seen Feb. 19). This fascinating, frustrating, genre-bending work never seems quite certain about itself: the DOB transplant of this production, originally seen last year at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, boasted a cast that far outshone the staging.

Lithuanian soprano Violeta Urmana fit nicely into the shoes of the strutting diva of the title role. This is a role she has sung previously at the Met. At DOB, her performance was distinguished by crystalline clarity and effortless volume. Urmana’s bright-hued timbre gave way to darker shades as the evening progressed, making for a richer, more involved performance, a highlight of which was a full-throttle account of the gently ebbing “Es gibt ein Reich.”

Ruxandra Donose made an even stronger impression as the impetuous Composer, singing with undeniable ardor, an attractively thick texture and a velvety low range, as in her compelling account of “Sein wir wieder gut.” The Zerbinetta of Jane Archibald was alternately reverent and feisty, as in her quasi-love duet with the Composer. And even if the massive orchestral force occasionally drowned her out, she tore through her vocally punishing role with obvious relish and assurance, especially in the extensive coloratura writing. She nearly stole the show with her “Grossmächtige Prinzessin,” which was here elaborately choreographed with various paramours popping out of pianos that glided comically across the stage.

As in most Strauss, the men of Ariadne play a decidedly supporting role. That said, Roberto Saccà was indeed godlike as Bacchus, singing with Italianate grace (and a pinch of schmaltz) that made the opera’s close more fitting and dramatically convincing. Met veteran Lenus Carlson was in fine form as the levelheaded Music Teacher. And baritone Simon Pauly did solid work as Harlequin, particularly in the tuneful “Lieben, Hassen, Hoffen, Zagen.”

Carsen, one of Europe’s busiest directors, is probably best known to U.S. audiences for his striking Met production of Eugene Onegin. In this Ariadne, he tried so constantly to break through the fourth wall that most of his attempts at abstraction ended up seeming bland.

The house lights stayed on for the better part of the Prologue, and various characters walked through the audience to make their entrances. The production, which featured sets by Peter Pabst and costumes by Falk Bauer, switched awkwardly between elegance and absurdity, an obvious mirror of the tension in the score between opera seria and commedia dell’arte. The self-referential elements — the large mirrors that reflected the audience, the exposed lighting and the completely bare stage that the Composer walked onto at the end of the opera, to be greeted by the applause of the cast — quickly grew tiresome. One bright spot was Marco Santi’s smart and edgy choreography, which livened things immeasurably, especially in the otherwise static Act II.

The evening’s maestro, Jacques Lacombe, had difficulty giving shape to the sinewy, often manic Prologue, the backstage drama that occupies the work’s first half. The directorial shenanigans did much to reinforce an impression of general havoc onstage and in the pit. Lacombe took much firmer command of his musicians with the opera within an opera, starting with a delicate account of the tortuous G-minor overture and not letting up until the glittering apotheosis of the closing bars.

BERLIN — Salome, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 2/1/09


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Richard Strauss’s Salome is an opera as emotionally unhinged as it is daringly modern. So one was interested to see what Achim Freyer, the controversial visionary behind Los Angeles Opera’s new production of the Ring cycle, would do to Strauss’s debauched heroine when Deutsche Oper Berlin revived his 2003 production in early February. The production images available on the company’s website promised that the evening would have its share of strangeness, and they probably had something to do with the poor attendance (seen Feb. 1).

I too had my reservations about what a Freyer Salome would look like, especially after seeing his recent Eugene Onegin at the Staatsoper Unter den Linden — a visually dazzling production that quickly ran out of ideas. With Salome, I was afraid that Freyer’s extreme distancing techniques would preclude genuine involvement in the relentless drama of the music. But it was precisely this quality about Salome that enabled Freyer’s spin to work. The high drama and breathless pace of a score tailored to suit a preexisting play were well served by this oddball, kooky production. With a staging concerned more with interpretation than with mere illustration, this Salome did not waste time over details of decor —the color of the heroine’s veils, the verisimilitude of the severed head — and thus spoke for itself.

Freyer’s Salome left the music exposed and pure, placing more demands than usual on the soprano who dares to take on this killer role. For this revival, the ravishing Manuela Uhl took up the challenge. Uhl — who obviously had no intention of being erased by the abstract, cartoonish sensibilities of this revival — created a Salome who was raw, energetic and passionate. She has an exciting, powerful voice and enough stamina to make it to the end of this punishing role. Her singing was fresh and convincing, if not always the picture of accuracy. Uhl ducked some high notes and decided to forgo some of the coloratura ornamentation, but her biggest problems were a weak low range — she often resorted to speaking — and exposed passaggio. She also pounced on her lines with an eagerness that, though not always in synch with the music, made for thrilling drama. Despite the shortcomings of her performance, the bulk of Strauss’s searing music sounded wondrous and convincing in her mouth, and aside from rough patches, her voice rang out with incredible volume and clarity from start to finish.

Uhl was supported by highly capable colleagues. Foremost among them was American baritone Alan Titus, the intense, booming Jochanaan. Chris Merritt, a lyric tenor with a background in Rossini operas, made an unexpectedly great Herodes, bringing out his character’s buffoonery and perversion with occasional Italianate embellishments. As his cutthroat wife Herodias, Hanna Schwarz sang like an avenging fury. Clemens Bieber — a DOB ensemble member — was a sympathetic and convincing Narraboth, declaiming his soaring, urgent lines with both finesse and an appealing ruggedness. The remaining roles were perfectly cast, from the Page of Julia Benzinger on down to the two Nazarenes.

The staging was as baffling as it was entrancing. The set appeared to have materialized out of a David Lynch dream sequence and resembled some kind of industrial carnival funhouse, with its numbered yellow factory doors and circus-like stage area. Much of the acting consisted of heightened, repeated gestures that took on a ritualistic aspect. This was complemented by the extremely clownish Expressionist makeup. The costumes were likewise irreverent and colorful, consisting of hand-drawn pinstriped suits and incorporating a childish variety of props, such as balloons for breasts, funnels and sand buckets for hats. One of the best touches was to number each of the Jews “1″ through “5.” All this added a magical, nursery-like feel to the narrative. The one misstep was an underwhelming dance of the seven veils, which was so confused and pedestrian that one wondered whether Freyer meant it as a comment on the evidently weaker quality of that music in comparison to the rest of the score.

At the helm of the massive orchestral force was Ulf Schirmer, whose account of the score mounted steadily in intensity, from the opening clarinet scale to the bone-crushing chords that describe Salome’s execution. In between, he was sensitive to the profusion of motifs and the score’s shimmering, exotic detail.

IN REVIEW
BERLIN — Der Rosenkavalier, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, 2/21/09

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With an extensive Strauss celebration underway at Deutsche Oper Berlin, Staatsoper unter den Linden got in on the action in February with a sumptuously sung revival of Nicolas Brieger’s production of Der Rosenkavalier, conducted by Asher Fisch (seen Feb. 21).

The most compelling reason to see this revival was the role debut of Magdalena Kožená as Octavian. This is a character that fits the Czech mezzo like a glove: her performance was an all-around revelation. She delivered her opening lines, “Wie du warst, wie du bist!” in soft, luminous notes of heartbreaking beauty. She matched the impassioned horns effortlessly, which is no small feat. Her richly textured voice communicated a dramatic range from ardor to impetuousness to despair and devotion. Every phrase was carefully thought out, with an exciting deployment of rubato providing added force to the fluency of her singing, which was free of any breaks or gasps for air. This revival also capitalized on the androgynous aspect of Kožená’s beauty, which only added to the completeness of the incarnation.

Every bit as assured was the Marschallin of Angela Denoke, whose tragically noble performance reminded us that Princess Marie Thérèse is the most complex character in the opera. Denoke was here both more aristocratic and more nuanced than in her 2005 Rosenkavalier appearances at the Met, which marked her debut with that company. A pitch-perfect companion to Kozená, Denoke wavered between the earthy and the ethereal, placing equal value on the mellifluous and dramatic aspects of her performance. Her full yet silky voice contained both laughter and repressed sorrow.

Bass Peter Rose, another Met veteran, was vocally persuasive and perversely charming as Baron Ochs. He switched effortlessly among the duets, waltzes and arioso that this difficult character is required to pull off. All in all, he was so rudely charming that he threatened to tip the opera in his favor.

Sylvia Schwartz suffered from a problem common to most Sophies — being upstaged by the titanic forces of her costars. Her light, pretty voice was far from slight, but it was still obscured in her Act II duet with Octavian and in the transcendent Act III trio.

The supporting roles were judiciously cast, with Paul O’Neill making a memorable impression as the Italian Tenor. Curiously, O’Neill came out in a wheelchair to sing “Di rigori armato” with requisite lyricism and fervor that won him peals of spontaneous applause.

The audience was less kind to conductor Asher Fisch, who took his bow amid persistent boos. Apparently, Berlin felt cheated by a performance that consciously sacrificed much of the work’s Viennese elegance for a courser, darker interpretation. From the weighty, muscular tempo of the opening bars and the lusty strings and winds somewhat obscured by the horns, it was clear that Fisch was intent on taking things in a different direction.

Brieger’s elegant production matched the refinement and taste on display in the singing. The direct, striking design brought to mind both Ruth Berghaus and Gilbert Defloe. The versatile horseshoe-shaped set morphed ingeniously from the decaying elegance of the Marschallin’s bedroom to the bourgeois trappings of the Faninal residence to the seedy inn of the closing act. The only false note the production struck was in the jumbled chaos of the Baron’s aborted seduction.

A. J. GOLDMANN

IN REVIEW
BERLIN — Faust, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, 2/22/09


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I am forever being told by veteran opera-lovers, “They don’t sing like they used to.” Perhaps this explains why certain works in the repertoire have lost their places of prominence or have been eliminated altogether: we simply no longer have the voices required to do them justice. Gounod’s Faust is hardly an obscure work, but the rate at which it is staged today is paltry when compared to the popularity it enjoyed before World War II. So it was thrilling (and transporting) to see a Faust at the Berlin Staatsoper unter den Linden so expertly sung that one understood the seductive spell it cast over audiences in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries (seen Feb. 22).

For its new production, the Staatsoper enlisted the talents of superb singers whose bravura performances cut through the dimmer inspirations of director Karsten Wiegand’s uneven staging.

Before the curtain went up, an announcement was made that two cast members, Charles Castronovo, the Faust, and Roman Trekel, the Valentin, would be singing despite colds. If anything, this inauspicious news only made the ensuing three and a half hours more impressive and thrilling. Castronovo, a New York-born lyric tenor, was somewhat throaty in the opening scene, with hesitant low notes. He was a bit off in the reprise of “A moi les plaisirs” with the devil, but he warmed up quickly. Before long, he was singing with heroic and darkly lacquered tones. He gasped certain phrases out suspensefully and projected others with an otherworldly quiver.

The sublime Russian soprano Marina Poplavskaya, best known to New York audiences for her performance as Natasha in the 2007 Met revival of Prokofiev’s War and Peace, was cast in the punishing role of Marguerite: she sang with fierce determination and unrelenting brazenness. It was a sensational performance, but one also worried about the toll that singing like that might take on the young soprano’s voice. She delivered an expressive and bouncy “Il était un roi de Thule” in a clear, restrained manner, then made a fluid transition to a wildly coquettish “Je ris de me voir si belle,” with delicious coloratura technique and an abundance of expressive muscle. It was but one climax in a performance with too many to highlights to enumerate.

As Méphistophélès, Réne Pape was — forgive the sacrilegious locution — absolutely godlike. He snickered and jeered though this wonderfully wicked role and let his character’s evil seep through most effectively in the quieter moments. His voice sounded effortlessly big, smoothly seductive and appropriately serpentine.

Despite his cold, Trekel struck the right tone as Valentin, his complex, robust voice communicating his character’s brotherly concern — as in his deeply felt “Avant de quitter ces lieux” — but also encompassing the rage and venom of Act IV. Silvia de la Muela sang Siébel with appropriate ardor and conviction.

Wiegand, a young German stage director who made his debut at the Staatsoper in 2006 with Maria Stuarda, provided an infuriatingly garish and amateurish Act I, setting the action at a raucous casino/house party. The noisy thrashing around brought to mind the rave that Calixto Bieito choreographed for his atrocious 2006 production of Wozzeck in Barcelona.

The casino set was moved away for Act II, which unfolded on a bare stage surrounded by silver-leafed walls — minimal yet all-around exquisite setting for this act that made the work uncommonly fluid by eliminating the need for clunky transitions between various set pieces. During Marguerite’s ascension, the walls lifted majestically to reveal the chorus seated at a heavenly banquet attired in tuxedos and cocktail dresses.

The stomach-churning touches of Wiegand’s production — Marguerite dashed her newborn’s brains against the wall and, in the end, slashed her own throat with a brooch — provided a jolting dose of realism to the otherwise abstract staging.

The version used for this production made the traditional cuts of the ballet and the Walpurgisnacht scene but included sporadic dialogue. Alain Altinoglu’s conducting was sweeping and sensitive. He made some daring decisions, slowing down to an almost dangerous level during the more introspective arias and favoring an all-around expansive approach that added an extra twenty minutes to the show’s running time. But then again, it’s hard to have too much of a good thing.

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Friday, October 3, 2008

Berlin inaugurates new season with tributes and surprises

Originally Published at gramophone.co.uk

Each September, Berlin celebrates the opening of the new concert season with musikfest berlin. This year’s installment features 16 orchestras, both homegrown and international, performing over 40 compositions. The musikfest, a co-production between the cultural organisation the Berliner Festspiele and the Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation, demonstrates how the various elements in Berlin’s rich music scene (the city boasts seven symphony orchestras and three opera houses) can work in harmony. Guest performances of orchestras from Holland, England, France and throughout Germany, highlight Berlin’s status as a prized destination for internationally-renowned ensembles.

This year’s installment places special emphasis on the works of Olivier Messiaen (who celebrates his centennial this year), Karlheinz Stockhausen (who died last year) and Anton Bruckner, composers united by their Catholic sensibilities. Popular and lesser-known works of this “spiritual triumvirate” forms the core of the programming (at least one work by each composer is featured at every concert), and are heard alongside pieces by Pierre Boulez, Elliott Carter, Helmut Lachmann, Wolfgang Rihm and Peter Eötvös, among others.

Highlights from the first week of the festival included a visit from the Orchestre de Paris and its conductor Christoph Eschenbach performing a varied programme of Messiaen, Ravel and Zemlinsky. Tuesday’s concert at the Philharmonie features soloists Christine Schäfer and Matthias Goerne in Zemlinsky’s lush “Lyrische Symphonie,” in a full-blooded performance that brought out Zemlinsky’s debt to Mahler and Schoenberg.

Schäfer was in excellent voice: agile, full of gentle phrasings and dramatic conviction that put one in mind of her magnificent Lulu and Pierrot Lunaire (the latter recorded with the Berliner Philharmoniker under the baton of Pierre Boulez). Her account of the fourth movement, “Spricht zu mir, Geliebter” was especially haunting. Goerne appeared despite a cold and was not in best form, often underpowered and holding himself a bit in reserve. Nevertheless, he pulled off an accurate and warm account.

The Berliner Philharmoniker debuted at the festival on Wednesday with a white-hot performance of Messiaen’s ambitious and sprawling Turangalîla Symphonie, which was prefaced by the Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde. In the Messiaen, the esteemed Pierre-Laurent Aimard appeared on piano along with composer Tristan Murail on the Ondes Martenot. Sir Simon Rattle’s approach recalled his handling of Le Sacre de Printemps, a work to which the Turangalîla is sometimes compared. Though excessive bombast marred several of the symphony’s ten movement, there were many moments of clarity and warmth, most notably the ghostly seventh movement, “Turangalîla 2,” with its controlled alternation between ghostly, meditative passages and majestically grand flourishes.

Week two of the festival will include performances from four of Berlin’s other leading orchestras: the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, led by Ingo Metzmacher; the Berlin Staatskapelle, headed by Daniel Barenboim; the Konzerthausorchester and its new musical director Lothar Zagrosek; and the Rundfunk-Sinfornieorchester Berlin, under the baton of Marek Janowski.

The festival’s closing event is also the undeniable highlight: two sold-out performances by Rattle and the Philharmoniker of Stockhausen’s early masterwork Gruppen für drei Orchester, where the audience is surrounded on three sides by separate orchestras, each conducted by its own conductor and following a different tempo. The programme also includes Messiaen’s Ex exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum, which like the Stockhausen pushes beyond the traditional boundaries of the concert hall. The concerts will be held in Hangar 2 of Berlin’s historic Tempelhof airport, where the Philharmoniker briefly relocated last season after a fire at the Philharmonie that rendered the hall temporarily unusable. The soon-to-be-closed Tempelhof was the base of the US-led Berlin Airlift 60 years ago during the Soviet blockade of West Berlin. The cavernous Hangar 2, a 4200-meter squared space with 18-meter high ceilings, is ideally suited to works that so insistently defy concert music conventions. Coming at the beginning of the season, the closing programme is an auspicious sign of the excitement yet to come in Germany’s most musically diverse and sophisticated city.

A.J. Goldmann

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Friday, July 4, 2008

Kozena and Rattle: Pelléas et Mélisande

Originally Published at Operanews.com

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On April 10, Berlin’s two most distinguished conductors swapped orchestras for an evening to conduct works derived from Maurice Maeterlinck’s symbolist play Pelléas et Mélisande. Daniel Barenboim, conductor of the Berlin Staatskapelle (the resident orchestra of the Staatsoper unter den Linden) led the Berliner Philharmoniker in a program that included Schoenberg’s tone poem of Pelléas. At precisely the same hour, Simon Rattle, chief conductor of the Berliner Philharmoniker, was making his Staatsoper debut conducting Debussy’s more famous operatic setting.

To make matters more intriguing, the evening’s Mélisande was the maestro’s partner, Czech mezzo Magdalena Kožená. Kožená, who was visibly pregnant, appeared opposite American tenor William Burden. Both singers were extraordinary, together and apart: each brought simple yet enigmatic matter-of-factness to this impossible love story. Kožená sang in a remarkably textured voice, by turns rough and lulling. There was something urgent yet defeatist about her soft murmurings and fluent declamations. Burden’s youthful-sounding performance was marked by agility and controlled lyricism. His gentle restraint was a worthy compliment to Kožena’s overt, aching desire.

Hanno Müller-Brachmann was a simple yet powerful Golaud. His richly fluid baritone expressed tenderness, pathos and violence. The fierce bass Robert Lloyd was somewhere between menacing and sympathetic as King Arkel. His sinister Act IV confrontation with Mélisande brimmed with repressed sexuality. Yniold, the child who unwittingly exposes the lovers to Golaud, was honey-voiced Andreas Mörwald, soloist of the Tölz Boys Choir.

The work was presented in Ruth Berghaus’s 1991 production, an Expressionist rendering that seemed equal parts Dr. Caligari and Dr. Seuss. Berghaus, who died in 1996, was best-known for her interpretations of Brecht. Her vision for Pelléas was a stage concept as abstract yet strangely affecting as the Debussy score. It featured a rotating metallic set, a sleek cave-like structure with jarring confrontations of curves and angles. Aside from providing a suitable visual complement to the music, the metallic sets resonated the onstage voices beautifully. Even Yniold rang out with a fullness and immediacy generally achieved only on recordings.

Rattle guided his singers gently through the tangled Impressionistic forest of the score. He highlighted the bass lines in the horns and contrabasses during the frequent orchestral interludes and took every opportunity to let loose at full force with the strings. The music remained wonderfully subdued, but Rattle frequently made it pulsate with drama and urgency. With expert singing, arresting visuals and a truly moving orchestral contribution, this was a Pélleas that never leaned too far in the direction of either sentimentality or cold abstraction.

A. J. GOLDMANN

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Berlin Philharmonic to play in historic Templehof airport hangar

International Herald Tribune

Thursday, May 29, 2008

BERLIN: The Berlin Philharmonic tested the acoustics Thursday in a hangar at the city’s Tempelhof Airport, the orchestra’s second temporary venue following a fire last week that severely damaged the roof of its home.

Tempelhof’s cavernous Hangar Two — occasionally used for rock concerts — had to be transformed into a makeshift concert hall for three performances this weekend of French composer Hector Berlioz’ “Symphonie Fantastique” and the cantata “La Mort de Cléopâtre.”

While the sound is nowhere near the quality enjoyed in the Philharmonic’s usual home, which has been closed since the May 20 fire, neither director Sir Simon Rattle nor soloist Susan Graham seemed bothered.

“Sometimes the emergency helicopters take off and it’s not so great. But otherwise, we’re lucky,” Rattle told The Associated Press at intermission during Thursday’s dress rehearsal.

Only one landing is scheduled to take place during the Thursday concert.

“It will be during intermission, or during the softest part of my piece,” Graham said, with a laugh. “My mind thinks ‘Oh my God, I’m in an airplane hangar,’ but the sound tells me something different.”

Last weekend, a series of three sold-out concerts with the orchestra’s former musical director Claudio Abbado was consolidated into one evening of music at the open-air Waeldbuhne venue, part of Berlin’s Olympic Stadium complex.

Pamela Rosenberg, the orchestra’s general manager, said she was pleased to have secured the hangar on such short notice, adding that “it’s sort of an empty shell, basically, and all the infrastructure’s been put in.”

The Philharmonic had already booked Hangar Two for a performance next season of German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen’s “Gruppen,” a massive musical work written for three orchestras that requires a massive space.

Performing the much more delicate Berlioz in the hangar could prove more difficult. Still, Rattle seemed confident that the venue, which was the hub of the Western allies’ Berlin Airlift after World War II, would not affect the performance.

“I think the important thing is we play like we would always play. We don’t try to make something different for the space,” Rattle said, then added he thought that Berlioz would have loved the idea of his music being performed in an airport.

“(Berlioz) wrote a piece for when the railways were first invented. So I think he’d be very happy for us to be in an airport hangar.”

The Philharmonic hopes to return to its home in downtown Berlin on June 2.

___

On the Net:

http://www.berliner-philharmoniker.de






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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 | Permalink | No Comments »