Where:
Online event
Admission:
$125.00, $95, $65 and $32; $10 for students. Subscriptions also available
Categories:
Music, Rainy Day Ideas, Virtual
Event website:
https://www.bostonphil.org/concerts/2023-2024/bpo1-rossini-elgar-beethoven
The first of four Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's concerts, continuing its tradition of presenting thrilling performances of orchestral masterpieces and bringing exciting soloists to Boston audiences. This concert features the Boston debut of Israeli born violinist Guy Braunstein, who was the concertmaster at the Berlin Philharmonic for 13 years.
The program includes:
Rossini William Tell Overture
Elgar Violin Concerto
Guy Braunstein, cello
Beethoven Symphony No. 7
According to Zander:
"Beethoven is a necessity. He is the composer I have devoted more attention to than to any other. I do not need to explain why I’ve chosen his Seventh Symphony; we haven’t performed it for over 30 years - it’s high time! I am thrilled to open our season with this masterpiece from Beethoven’s “heroic decade.”
I’ve put it together with Rossini’s William Tell Overture, in part to feature our wonderful cello section and also because I’ve always felt that the 7th is too often played with an excessively aggressive and Teutonic approach, which obscures Beethoven’s inspiration. Beethoven was aware of Rossini’s enormous success in Vienna and this symphony was his response. So, you may hear a rather different view of this beloved masterpiece, surely the most vigorous and joyful of all of Beethoven’s symphonies.
The Elgar Violin Concerto has been a favorite of mine ever since, as a boy, I heard the–in my view never equaled recording of the 15-year-old Yehudi Menuhin, with Elgar himself conducting. It is music of intimacy and generosity, subtlety and power, in which soloist and orchestra are inextricably entwined, like chamber music writ large. For this reason, when we performed this concerto forty years ago, I chose Oscar Shumsky. as the soloist, the legendary concertmaster of the NBC Symphony. This time we turn to one of the great concertmasters of this era, Guy Braunstein, who served for thirteen years as the concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic and is steeped in the European culture that Elgar knew so well. Boston hasn’t heard him yet but a German critic said "with his intense playing and sheer endless musical imagination, Guy Braunstein joins the ranks of history’s great violinists" (Hans Ackermann, RBB KulturRadio). I can’t wait."
The remaining concerts in the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's 2023-24 season include:
Friday, November 17, 2023, 8 PM
Weber Freischütz Overture
Bartok Piano Concerto No. 3
Benjamin Hochman, piano
Shostakovich Symphony No. 10
Saturday, February 24, 2024, 8 PM
Strauss Wiener Blut Waltz
Berg Violin Concerto
Liza Ferschtman, violin
Mahler Symphony No. 1
Friday, April 26, 2024, 8 PM
Mozart C Minor Piano Concerto
Alessandro Deljavan, piano
Bruckner Symphony No. 9
Saturday, Dec 21, 2024 11:00a
Crystal Ballroom at Somerville Theatre