I am heading out in about an hour to see Beethoven's 6th. It is being webcast and so will be at this page: http://www.dso.org/Live.aspx
Concert starts 8 pm today Eastern Daylight Time.
Michelle Merrill, conductor
Program
Dvorák--Carnival Overture, Op. 92
Piston--Suite from The Incredible Flutist
Vanhal--Concerto for double bass in E-flat major
Beethoven--Symphony No. 6, "Pastorale"
"Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
Excellent. Each piece was better than the previous one, but of course the 6th was fantastic! My son and I saw the Fifth last fall (Muti and CSO) and he remarked that he thinks he likes the 6th better than the 5th. I hold them both very highly and have a couple single disk sets that include both 5th and 6th (Blomsted and Munch). The thing is, it is always over too quickly.
It was especially interesting watching the drums as the thunder was rolling.
Next year (May 2017) they are doing Beethoven's Ninth!
"Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
Excellent. Each piece was better than the previous one, but of course the 6th was fantastic! My son and I saw the Fifth last fall (Muti and CSO) and he remarked that he thinks he likes the 6th better than the 5th. I hold them both very highly and have a couple single disk sets that include both 5th and 6th (Blomsted and Munch). The thing is, it is always over too quickly.
It was especially interesting watching the drums as the thunder was rolling.
Next year (May 2017) they are doing Beethoven's Ninth!
Yes, I liked seeing the 6th during the thunder too!
Here is a great painting someone did of the thunder:
Excellent. Each piece was better than the previous one, but of course the 6th was fantastic! My son and I saw the Fifth last fall (Muti and CSO) and he remarked that he thinks he likes the 6th better than the 5th. I hold them both very highly and have a couple single disk sets that include both 5th and 6th (Blomsted and Munch). The thing is, it is always over too quickly.
It was especially interesting watching the drums as the thunder was rolling.
Next year (May 2017) they are doing Beethoven's Ninth!
I decided not to go to the May 2017 Ninth at the Detroit Symphony.
What, not go to the Ninth!
No, seriously, I like Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor much better and I just found out they are doing the Ninth next February with the Budapest symphony. I also plan to go the following Month to Hill Auditorium as the Ann Arbor symphony performs Beethoven's Missa Solemnis. What a wonderful year 2017 will be.
"Life is too short to spend it wandering in the barren Sahara of musical trash."
--Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff
I attended the Simon Rattle/Berlin Philharmonic filmed performance that was simulcast in theaters a month ago (deep and spirited), then the Princeton University Orchestra under Michael Pratt, which performed three movements of the Seventh during a ballet about Beethoven's loss of hearing and his ultimate triumph (technical issues overcome by excellent timing, pacing, feeling). That was by the American Repertory Ballet in Princeton, N.J. Finally, this past Friday, it was the principal guest conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, Stephane Deneve, conducting a rendition that started a bit slow and predictable, but warmed up culminating in a conclusion of wonderful frenzy. I am in Seventh heaven! :-)
"Just because you're not famous, doesn't mean you're not great!"
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