Berliner Philharmonie 22 September 2020 - Karajan-Akademie der Berliner Philharmoniker | GoComGo.com

Karajan-Akademie der Berliner Philharmoniker

Berliner Philharmonie, Main Hall (DOUBLE), Berlin, Germany
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8 PM
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Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Berlin, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
Duration:

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Festival

Musikfest Berlin 2020

33 performances, nine world premieres

Musikfest Berlin 2020 will approach the beginning of the concert season with caution. Its new programme will follow the rules that protective measures from the COVID-19 pandemic have placed on public concerts. Many of the projects that have been prepared across Germany to mark this Beethoven year have fallen victim to the coronavirus crisis and have been postponed until next year.

Programme
Rebecca Saunders: Cinnabar, Double concerto for violin and trumpet, ensemble and 11 musical clocks
Rebecca Saunders: Fury, for double bass solo
Enno Poppe: Koffer
Milica Djordjević: New Work
Overview

The Karajan Academy’s objective is to train and support emerging orchestra musicians. At the centre of this concert is the world premiere of a work by the Serbian and Berlin-based composer Milica Djordjević, which will be encircled by works by Rebecca Saunders and the German composer Enno Poppe, who will also be directing the Karajan Academy.

Today, it is almost a matter of course: Great, renowned orchestras host academies for the emerging generation of artists. Young musicians receive an excellent education which, however, is often mainly geared towards the solo repertoire. Here, they have the opportunity of perfecting their art side by side with experienced and excellent professional musicians – in orchestral and ensemble music, chamber music and cooperative solo projects. However, when Herbert von Karajan took the initiative to found an academy with the Berliner Philharmoniker nearly half a century ago, this was a pioneering feat.

At the beginning of this season, the work of the Karajan Academy will focus on contemporary music. Enno Poppe, a composer, conductor and clear, convincing champion of New Music, will be at the helm. His own work demonstrates the art of creating polymorphous and extensive connections from a succinct central idea, a compositional molecule, as it were. A performance of Rebecca Saunders’ analysis of the concertante as an exposed and interactive expression and her equally wild and sensitive piece for double bass concludes and rounds out one of this year’s Musikfest Berlin’s main focus themes.

Milica Djordjević's music is described as “rough, often even raw in the gesture”, as a “vital tonal language that refuses less harmony and beautiful sound than that it gives the experience of the elemental quite pleasurably: tones of the earth’s emanations.” Milica Djordević has won this year’s Claudio Abbado Composition Prize, and she also received a commission from the Karajan Academy of the Berlin Philharmonic for a new work that will be premiered that evening.

Venue Info

Berliner Philharmonie - Berlin
Location   Herbert-von-Karajan-Str. 1

The Berliner Philharmonie is a concert hall in Berlin, Germany and home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. The Philharmonie lies on the south edge of the city's Tiergarten and just west of the former Berlin Wall. The Philharmonie is on Herbert-von-Karajan-Straße, named for the orchestra's longest-serving principal conductor. The building forms part of the Kulturforum complex of cultural institutions close to Potsdamer Platz.

The Philharmonie consists of two venues, the Grand Hall (Großer Saal) with 2,440 seats and the Chamber Music Hall (Kammermusiksaal) with 1,180 seats. Though conceived together, the smaller hall was opened in the 1980s, some twenty years after the main building.

Hans Scharoun designed the building, which was constructed over the years 1960–1963. It opened on 15 October 1963 with Herbert von Karajan conducting Beethoven's 9th Symphony. It was built to replace the old Philharmonie, destroyed by British bombers on 30 January 1944, the eleventh anniversary of Hitler becoming Chancellor. The hall is a singular building, asymmetrical and tentlike, with the main concert hall in the shape of a pentagon. The height of the rows of seats increases irregularly with distance from the stage. The stage is at the centre of the hall, surrounded by seating on all sides. The so-called vineyard-style seating arrangement (with terraces rising around a central orchestral platform) was pioneered by this building, and became a model for other concert halls, including the Sydney Opera House (1973), Denver's Boettcher Concert Hall (1978), the Gewandhaus in Leipzig (1981), Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles (2003), and the Philharmonie de Paris (2014).

Jazz pianist Dave Brubeck and his quartet recorded three live performances at the hall; Dave Brubeck in Berlin (1964), Live at the Berlin Philharmonie (1970), and We're All Together Again for the First Time (1973). Miles Davis's 1969 live performance at the hall has also been released on DVD.

On 20 May 2008 a fire broke out at the hall. A quarter of the roof suffered considerable damage as firefighters cut openings to reach the flames beneath the roof. The hall interior sustained water damage but was otherwise "generally unharmed". Firefighters limited damage using foam. The cause of the fire was attributed to welding work, and no serious damage was caused either to the structure or interior of the building. Performances resumed, as scheduled, on 1 June 2008 with a concert by the San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra.

The main organ was built by Karl Schuke, Berlin, in 1965, and renovated in 1992, 2012 and 2016. It has four manuals and 91 stops. The pipes of the choir organs and the Tuba 16' and Tuba 8' stops are not assigned to any group and can be played from all four manuals and the pedals.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Berlin, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
Duration:
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