Posts Tagged ‘Andreas Ottensamer’
Tuesday, June 17th, 2014
By Rebecca Schmid If Krzysztof Urbanski’s debut with the Berlin Philharmonic late last month should serve as any indication, this is a conductor whom we can expect to hear again soon at the Philharmonie. The young Polish native, quickly on the rise on the both sides of the Atlantic, presided over an all-Czech program on […]
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Tags: Andreas Buschatz, Andreas Ottensamer, Berlin Philharmonic, Dvorak, Krzysztof Urbanski, Martinu, musicalamerica, Philharmonie, Rebecca Schmid, Smetana, Sol Gabetta
Posted in Berlin Times | Comments Off on Krzysztof Urbanski makes Berlin Philharmonic Debut
Friday, May 16th, 2014
By Rebecca Schmid Classical music historiography of the 20th century tends to create neatly delineated periods, with World War Two creating a kind of indelible caesura in all things aesthetic and philosophical. This is particularly true in Germany, where the Nachkriegszeit (post-war period) is defined as a veritable epoch: a time in which the country […]
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Tags: Aco Aleksander Bišćević, Allan Clayton, Andreas Ottensamer, Aribert Reimann, barrie kosky, Castor et Pollux, Cenk Sahin, Christian Curnyn, David Robert Coleman, Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Frans Helmerson, Gili Schwarzman, Guy Braunstein, Jerusalem International Chamber Music Festival, Jonathan Gilad, Katrin Lea Tag, komische oper, Mojca Erdmann, Mor Biron, Nicole Chevalier, Richard Strauss
Posted in Berlin Times | Comments Off on New works at the Jewish Museum; Rameau’s “Castor et Pollux”
Friday, January 11th, 2013
By Rebecca Schmid Journeys have provided powerful inspiration to writers, painters and composers alike, opening eyes to new ways of seeing the world. The broadening of artists’ palettes has sometimes allowed them to capture a landscape more vividly than the natives could themselves. One only has to think of Dvorak’s New World Symphony, Gauguin’s portraits […]
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Tags: Andreas Ottensamer, Berlin Philharmonic, Berlin Times, bruckner, Daishin Kashimoto, Dvorak, Gauguin, Mendelssohn, musical america, Philharmonie, Rebecca Schmid, Riccardo Chailly, Switzerland
Posted in Berlin Times, Uncategorized | Comments Off on An Italian, and possibly a Swiss, Symphony at the Philharmonie