A Beethoven evening with Daniel Barenboim, Itzhak Perlman and Yo-Yo Ma

“Beethoven’s music is universal. Anywhere in the world, it speaks to all people,” according to Daniel Barenboim, conducting the composer’s Choral Fantasy and the Triple Concerto in this 1995 concert – works which are seldom heard in the concert hall due to the unusual orchestral forces they require. Barenboim played the piano part himself in this case and was supported by two famous string players: Itzhak Perlman and Yo-Yo Ma.

Ludwig van Beethoven is one of the key figures in the career of pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim. He had already recorded all of Beethoven’s piano sonatas and concertos before his 30th birthday in recordings that remain legendary to this day. But he is also passionate about the composer’s less frequently played works, which sometimes have a hard time with audiences and critics. Consequently, the programme for this concert included the Triple Concerto and the Choral Fantasy.

Beethoven composed the Choral Fantasy in 1808 as the finale to a truly gargantuan concert which had already featured his fifth and sixth symphonies, three movements from the C major Mass, a concert aria and the Fourth Piano Concerto. Right at the end he intended all of the orchestral and vocal forces to join together as one in a “Fantasy on the Piano, eventually culminating in the entry of the entire orchestra, as well as the chorus, in a grand finale”. Beethoven himself played the piano at the premiere and had to improvise the long solo introduction, as he had not finished the composition on time. The result is a fascinating mixture of symphonic and vocal music that paves the way to the jubilant finale of his Ninth Symphony.

The Triple Concerto too goes beyond Classical genre limits when the orchestra is faced by a veritable chamber music ensemble in the form of a trio comprising piano, violin and cello. For Barenboim this was a “very exciting experiment in sound,” which according to the Berliner Zeitung was a resounding success on this occasion, as “the Triple Concerto developed a breathtaking and playful firework display that developed slowly and was ignited by Itzhak Perlman (violin) and Yo-Yo Ma (cello), who elicited from their priceless instruments opulent sounds of the highest quality.”

Berliner Philharmoniker
Daniel Barenboim
Daniel Barenboim
Itzhak Perlman
Yo-Yo Ma
Chœur du Deutsche Oper Berlin

© 1995 EuroArts Music International

Artistes

Daniel Barenboim Chef d’orchestre, piano
Ludwig van Beethoven Compositeur
Itzhak Perlman Violon
Yo-Yo Ma Violoncelle

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