Daniel Barenboim conducts the 2014 Europakonzert in Berlin
For their Europakonzert, the Berliner Philharmoniker perform at a venue of cultural significance every year. This doubtlessly includes the Philharmonie which celebrated its 50th birthday in the 2013/2014 season and was therefore an excellent choice of venue. The programme, conducted by Daniel Barenboim, has an international flavour with the overture to Otto Nicolai’s The Merry Wives of Windsor, Elgar’s Falstaff and Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony.
Daniel Barenboim has been working with the Berliner Philharmoniker for almost 50 years: he made his debut under the direction of Pierre Boulez as the soloist in Béla Bartók’s First Piano Concerto in June 1964, and six years later he conducted the orchestra for the first time. He has since performed regularly with the Berliner Philharmoniker as a pianist and conductor.
The programme of this Europakonzert has an international flavour: Otto Nicolai’s Singspiel The Merry Wives of Windsor, which received its premiere in Berlin in 1849, is based on William Shakespeare’s comedy of the same name, and its lively overture has long since secured a place on the concert stage. Also inspired by a Shakespearean comedy hero is Edward Elgar’s symphonic study Falstaff. We then turn from comedy to the tragic twists of fate: The Fifth Symphony of Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky is characterised by a sombre main theme that for the Russian composer symbolises “a complete resignation before fate, which is the same as the inscrutable predestination of fate”.
© 2014 EuroArts Music International
Catégories
Artistes
Nos suggestions
- Europakonzert from Oxford with Daniel Barenboim and Alisa Weilerstein
- Daniel Barenboim and Plácido Domingo at the 1992 Europakonzert in the Escorial
- Daniel Barenboim conducts Mozart at the 2006 Europakonzert from Prague
- Daniel Barenboim conducts the 1997 Europakonzert from Versailles
- 1993 Europakonzert from London with Bernard Haitink and Frank Peter Zimmermann
- Europakonzert from Athens with Simon Rattle and Daniel Barenboim