“Swing Symphony” with Simon Rattle and Wynton Marsalis
It was a very special summit: the joint appearance of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, led by star trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, and the Berliner Philharmoniker with chief conductor Sir Simon Rattle. The occasion was the world premiere of Marsalis’s Swing Symphony, which demonstrates just how well the worlds of jazz and classical music can complement and enrich each other. The programme also included: Igor Stravinsky’s ballet music Petrushka.
At the 1983 Grammy Awards, trumpeter Wynton Marsalis was honoured both as a jazz and a classical musician, something unique at that time. An outstanding ability in both genres has been his trademark to this day, as can be heard to great effect in this concert in which, together with his band, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, he premieres his Swing Symphony with the Philharmoniker conducted by Sir Simon Rattle.
Commissioned by the Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation, this composition is Marsalis’s third symphonic work. With this piece his intention was no less than to trace the long and rich history of jazz. Just how spectacularly he succeeded could be read in the Hamburger Abendblatt: “Fast and furious bebop phrases delivered faultlessly by the violins; tricky brass passages with perfect timing and no stiffness: a lot of first-class musicians had a load of fun with this and each other.”
There is, on the other hand, a premiere in this concert with Simon Rattle’s interpretation of Stravinsky’s ballet music Petrushka. Together with the Berliner Philharmoniker, Rattle has often performed other scores by the composer – Le Sacre du printemps in particular – and this with tremendous success. This concert was the first time they played this work together, the story of the ill-starred Petrushka who first loses the object of his affection and then his life at a Russian Shrovetide fair.
© 2010 Berlin Phil Media GmbH
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