The
Biennale of the Berlin Philharmonic – a mid-February concert series with a
focus on post-war modernism and, in particular, the works of György Ligeti –
opened the previous week with a programme that surrounded two of Ligeti’s most
essential orchestral scores, Lontano and Atmosphères, with
impressionistic ocean-themed works from earlier in the century. If the second
orchestral programme, which placed Ligeti’s Requiem in the company of
works by Bernd Alois Zimmermann and Bohuslav Martinů, was arguably less
conceptual in its plan, it was considerably more cohesive as both an evening of
music and an evocation of twentieth-century extremes. While the programme had
originally been intended as a guest appearance for Sir Simon Rattle, Matthias
Pintscher, who took over after Sir Simon was forced to withdraw, directed
electrifying performances…
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