Laeiszhalle Hamburg 21 March 2021 - Symphoniker Hamburg / Charles Dutoit | GoComGo.com

Symphoniker Hamburg / Charles Dutoit

Laeiszhalle Hamburg, Grosser Saal, Hamburg, Germany
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7 PM
Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Hamburg, Germany
Starts at: 19:00
Duration:

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Programme
Claude Debussy: Petite Suite
Jean Sibelius: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in D minor, Op. 47
Igor Stravinsky: Petrushka Suite (1947 version)
Overview

A podium legend as a conductor and a perfect start to the concert: Claude Debussy's "Little Suite" was initially created in the version for four hands and was popular as house music in many middle-class rooms - for the first time in 1889 with the participation of the composer himself entertaining, the cheerful dance is in the foreground.

Guy Braunstein, former concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic and the Symphoniker, plays the solo part in Jean Sibelius ‘Violin Concerto. No Scandinavian composer has clichéd attributions more fatal than Sibelius from Finland. With "Finlandia" he created the unofficial anthem of his home country. But in his violin concerto, composed in the early years of the 20th century, one can clearly hear: Sibelius was a European composer of immense importance for music history. Anyone who only hears vastness, forests and melancholy in his music is doing him an injustice.

A contemporary of Debussy and Sibelius ‘who is a few years younger closes the evening. After the triumphant success of the ballet "The Firebird" in 1910, Igor Stravinsky became world famous at one stroke. The happy collaboration with Sergei Diaghilew, the influential impresario of the "Ballets Russes", was to be continued with "Petrushka" a year later. Stravinsky himself provided the most apt description: “In this work I had the persistent idea of ​​a jointed puppet that suddenly comes to life and the orchestra's patience with the diabolical arpeggio of its leaps is so exhausted that it threatens it with fanfares. The result is a thundering confusion that ends with the poor jumping jack's joking and pathetic collapse. "

Venue Info

Laeiszhalle Hamburg - Hamburg
Location   Johannes-Brahms-Platz

The Laeiszhalle (About this soundlisten)), formerly Musikhalle Hamburg, is a concert hall in the Neustadt of Hamburg, Germany and home to the Hamburger Symphoniker and the Philharmoniker Hamburg. The hall is named after the German shipowning company F. Laeisz, founder of the concert venue. The Baroque Revival Laeiszhalle was planned by the architect Martin Haller and inaugurated at its location on the Hamburg Wallring on June 4, 1908. At that time, the Musikhalle was Germany's largest and most modern concert hall.

Composers such as Richard Strauss, Sergei Prokofiev, Igor Stravinsky and Paul Hindemith played and conducted their works in the Laeiszhalle. Pianist Vladimir Horowitz gave one of his first international performances in 1926; violinist Yehudi Menuhin gave a guest performance in 1930 at the age of twelve. Following World War II, which it survived intact, the Laeiszhalle experienced an intermezzo when the British occupying forces used the space temporarily as a broadcast studio for their radio station BFN. Maria Callas gave concerts in 1959 and 1962. In the 1960s the musical repertoire was also expanded to jazz and pop music, with performances by Pink Floyd, Lale Andersen, Bee Gees, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Udo Jürgens and Elton John.

The Laeizhalle has two separate performance spaces. Due to its relatively low capacity and stage layout, the Laeiszhalle is particularly suitable for the performance of classical and early romantic repertoire, and less so for staging large-scale twentieth-century works. The management of both the Elbphilharmonie and the Laeiszhalle are under the direction of one concert company. Christoph Lieben-Seutter became General and Artistic Director in 2007.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Hamburg, Germany
Starts at: 19:00
Duration:
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