Where:
Symphony Hall
301 Massachusetts Avenue
Boston, MA 02115
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/bpo4-mozart-bruckner
The final Boston Philharmonic Orchestra's concert in celebration of its 45th year, continuing its tradition of presenting thrilling performances of orchestral masterpieces and bringing exciting soloists to Boston audiences.
The program includes:
Mozart C Minor Piano Concerto
Alessandro Deljavan, piano
Bruckner Symphony No. 9
Founder and Conductor Benjamin Zander will provide his popular "Guide to the Music" talk prior to the concert at 6:45 PM. All ticket holders are invited.
According to Zander:
"Finally, to honor Anton Bruckner’s 200th anniversary, we turn to his final work, the unfinished Ninth Symphony. This heaven-storming, stubborn, sublime work is as deep and ecstatic an experience as music has to offer. Intense beauty radiates from every bar, leaving everyone deeply moved, even people who might think that they are allergic to Bruckner’s music. From our very beginning as an orchestra, we have returned to Bruckner as a haven for the soul. Do not miss it!
The most natural companion for this Bruckner symphony is music of Mozart. Not the sublime, conversational Mozart, but the dark and romantic Mozart, as in the C-minor Piano Concerto. Our soloist is one of the most beloved guests of recent years, Alessandro Deljavan, who mesmerized our audiences with his performances of Brahms's Second Piano Concerto in 2019.
Alessandro’s performance of Brahms's 2nd concerto was as great as any I have ever heard, so one wonders why he hasn’t reached household name status. The critics agree: Richard Dyer, former Chief critic of The Boston Globe wrote "Alessandro Deljavan is a keyboard virtuoso with an equally virtuoso brain, ear and imagination. He plays in a manner that is simultaneously commanding and questioning, shocking and illuminating." and Scott Cantrell the Chief Music critic of the Dallas Morning News wrote “Deljavan played with jaw-dropping virtuosity and heart-stopping eloquence.” I had to have him back to work on something else. It will be thrilling to hear those qualities unleashed in Mozart’s most turbulent and dramatic piano concerto."