Simon Rattle’s first Waldbühne concert
In 1995, four years before the orchestra elected him its chief conductor, Simon Rattle conducted his first Waldbühne Concert with the Berliner Philharmoniker. It was with tremendous verve that he introduced local audiences to highlights of the American repertory, which at that date was still a rarity at Philharmonic concerts. Many of the orchestra’s fans must have been surprised to discover how original and magnificent are works like Bernstein’s Candide and Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess.
In 1976, at the age of only 21, Rattle conducted an acclaimed production of Porgy and Bess in London, and ten years later he was back to conduct the piece for the first time at the prestigious Glyndebourne Festival. Among the soloists were Willard White, Cynthia Haymon and Damon Evans, all three of whom achieved their international breakthrough with their appearances in Gershwin’s “folk opera”. At the Waldbühne concert, too, they helped to create the right atmosphere for an opera set in the Southern States.
Before this, the orchestra had briefly shrunk in size to the dimensions of a jazz combo in order to do justice to another Gershwin classic: the Rhapsody in Blue. The pianist was another old acquaintance of Rattle, Wayne Marshall, who had played the role of the jazz pianist Jasbo Brown at Glyndebourne. In Berlin he “conjured up the music of this popular piece with altogether exceptional agility,” noted the Berliner Zeitung. “The audience acclaimed the pianist on the completion of his task.”
For Leonard Bernstein, Gershwin’s music was the very embodiment of all that is American: “I don’t think there is anyone in the civilized world who wouldn’t know right away that that music is American music. It sounds American, it smells American – makes up feel American when you hear it.” Exactly the same can also be said of the music of the multitalented Bernstein, as the orchestra demonstrated with its performances of his Prelude, Fugue and Riffs and his infectiously brilliant overture to Candide. The audience’s enthusiasm was rewarded with two encores in the form of two Gershwin songs before the evening ended on a traditional note with Paul Lincke’s Berliner Luft.
© 1995 EuroArts Music International
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