Konzerthaus Berlin: Konzerthaus Orchestra Berlin, Iván Fischer

Konzerthaus Berlin, Gendarmenmarkt 2, 10117 Berlin, Mitte

Concert tickets 2for1 Sunday 13 January, 2019

Unfortunately this offer is no longer valid.

Into the new year with classical sounds! You are listening to Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 9 in D Major!

For Iván Fischer, "an almost divine love that goes beyond the personal" fulfils the "endless flow" of slow movements in Gustav Mahler's symphonies. The Honorary Conductor of the Konzerthaus Berlin feels particularly attached to the eclectic musical language of the Viennese composer - for him, the musical language of our time is one such language.

For the first time he interprets Mahler's last completed symphony with the Konzerthausorchester, the Ninth, which was first performed in 1912, the year after the composer's death. Perceived as Mahler's anticipated farewell to the world and, due to its structure and harmony, also as the "first work of New Music" (Alban Berg), it ends quietly, but without resignation.

 

 

on January 13, 2019 - at 16:00
in the Great Hall

 

 

 

Into the new year with classical sounds! You are listening to Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 9 in D Major!

For Iván Fischer, "an almost divine love that goes beyond the personal" fulfils the "endless flow" of slow movements in Gustav Mahler's symphonies. The Honorary Conductor of the Konzerthaus Berlin feels particularly attached to the eclectic musical language of the Viennese composer - for him, the musical language of our time is one such language.

For the first time he interprets Mahler's last completed symphony with the Konzerthausorchester, the Ninth, which was first performed in 1912, the year after the composer's death. Perceived as Mahler's anticipated farewell to the world and, due to its structure and harmony, also as the "first work of New Music" (Alban Berg), it ends quietly, but without resignation.

 

 

on January 13, 2019 - at 16:00
in the Great Hall

 

 

 

Info: Konzerthaus Berlin

The Konzerthaus Berlin is located in one of the city's most beautiful squares, the Gendarmenmarkt. Just like the square, the house itself has a long and varied tradition. Built in 1821 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in classicist style as a playhouse, it was reopened as a concert hall in 1984 after its destruction in the Second World War. The former Schauspielhaus has been known as the Konzerthaus since 1994.

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