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  • (c) Marco Borggreve
    © Marco Borggreve

Bruckner's Symphony No. 7: Short concert in the early evening

Berlin, Konzerthaus Berlin — Großer Saal

Best seats  1 h 15 min Give as a gift card

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Total Price
$ 43

About the Event

Experience classical music like never before in this astonishing performance of Anton Bruckner's masterwork by at Berlin's remarkable Konzerthaus.

Experience Christoph Eschenbach with Bruckner's Symphony No. 7, on which the composer wrote from 1881 to 1883. Meanwhile, Richard Wagner died. Bruckner wrote his mourning for his revered colleague into the coda of the Adagio, which is intoned by Wagnerian tubas and horns.

Program

  • Anton Bruckner – Sinfonie Nr. 7 E‐Dur
Program is subject to change

Artists

Conductor: Christoph Eschenbach

Christoph Eschenbach, born 1940 in Breslau, Germany (today Wroclaw, Poland) is a noted pianist and conductor. Orphaned by World War II, he won numerous first‐place piano competition prizes. In 1964 he made his first recording (of Mozart) for Deutsche Grammophon and signed a contract with the label.

Prior to being named to his positions as Music Director of the Orchestre de Paris and the Philadelphia Orchestra, he held principal conducting and directing positions with orchestras in Ludwigshafen and Hamburg (Germany) and the Ravinia Festival (outside Chicago, Illinois). In 1981 he became principal guest conductor of Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich, and was chief conductor from 1982‐86. Other posts include music director of the Houston (1988‐99); chief conductor of the Hamburg NDR Symphony (1998‐2004); and music director of the Ravinia Festival, summer home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (1994‐2003). He has made numerous recordings both as piano soloist and conductor.

He is credited with helping and supporting talented young musicians in their career development including soprano Renée Fleming and pianists Tzimon Barto and Lang Lang.

Konzerthaus Berlin

The Konzerthaus Berlin is a concert hall situated on the Gendarmenmarkt, the most beautiful square in the city. Built in 1821, the structure initially served as a theater. Severely damaged in the Second World War, it was rebuilt as a concert hall in 1977, with a neoclassical interior, and changed its name to reflect its new function in 1994. Consistently numbered among the top five concert halls in the world, the Konzerthaus hosts around 500 performances every year, ranging from symphony and chamber concerts featuring international stars to new music and children's concerts.

Address

Konzerthaus Berlin, Gendarmenmarkt, Berlin, Germany — Google Maps

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