Mariss Jansons conducts music from the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the Waldbühne

Travellers who visited the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the 19th century would have come into contact with the most disparate musical idioms: Austrians, Bohemians and Hungarians all wrote works that were individually coloured but characterized by a shared sense of verve and radiance. Mariss Jansons conducted highlights of this fascinating culture at the Waldbühne in Berlin. The works performed were pieces by Johann Strauss, Franz Liszt and George Enescu.

The Viennese waltz was always bound to feature prominently in a programme headed “A Night of Dances and Rhapsodies”, and on this occasion the works in question were the overture to Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss the Younger and the suite of waltzes from Richard Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier – although here the waltzes are an anachronism since the opera is set in the Vienna of Maria Theresa at a time when the waltz had yet to be discovered. The Waltz King is also represented by his polka Thunder and Lightning, while his father, Johann Strauss the Elder, contributes arguably the most famous march of all time, a work written in honour of Field Marshal Josef Wenzel Count Radetzky von Radetz.

Hungary, Romania and Bohemia also belonged to the Habsburgs’ Austro-Hungarian Empire, and their music inspired Western European composers like Brahms and Liszt to write “Hungarian” works of their own. (Liszt may have been born in what was then Hungary, but he did not speak a word of Hungarian.) Both composers were paying tribute to the contemporary fashion for exotic rhythms and tone colours, while their colleagues Bedřich Smetana and George Enescu were more concerned to give their respective nations a distinctive musical voice.

An undoubted highlight of this Waldbühne concert is Liszt’s arrangement of Schubert’s Wanderer Fantasy, an arrangement that transformed Schubert’s discursive piano piece into a highly virtuosic bravura work for piano and orchestra. The brilliant soloist was the Tashkent-born, Paris-based pianist Mikhail Rudy, a long-time musical associate of Mariss Jansons.

Berliner Philharmoniker
Mariss Jansons
Mikhaïl Rudy

© 1994 VIDEAL / brilliant media, SFB

Catégorie

Artistes

Mariss Jansons Chef d’orchestre
Franz von Suppè Compositeur
Franz Schubert Compositeur
George Enescu Compositeur
Bedřich Smetana Compositeur
Richard Strauss Compositeur
Johann Strauss II Compositeur
Franz Liszt Compositeur
Johannes Brahms Compositeur
Johann Strauss Compositeur
Paul Lincke Compositeur

Nos suggestions

Aide Contact
Voici comment faire Newsletter Accès institutionnel Accès Bons d’achat
Mentions légales CGV Protection des données