As the weeks of Musikfest Berlin neared
their conclusion, the Vienna Philharmonic made a welcome visit to the stage of
the Philharmonie with Christian Thielemann as conductor. While the programme,
which paired the first (numbered) symphonies of Schumann and Bruckner, offered
none of the neglected masterworks, obscure composers or twentieth-century
rarities that often make Musikfest concerts so memorable, the performances on
this evening served as an eloquent reminder that sometimes the best concerts
can arise from the simple combination of familiar works, a superlative
orchestra, and a conductor with a strong vision for how the music should sound.
Certainly Schumann’s symphonies are as
familiar as it gets: along with Beethoven and Brahms, Schumann’s symphonic
output stands at the very centre of the nineteenth-century European…
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