What Makes It Great? with Rob Kapilow: George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue
with piano soloist Clayton Stephenson and the Berklee Contemporary Symphony
This site uses cookies to measure our traffic and improve your experience. By clicking "OK" you consent to our use of cookies.
Jakub Hrůša, a “serious, thoughtful conductor” (ArtsDesk) whose star is on the rise around the world, leads the Bamberg Symphony in this all-German, all-Romantic program. Hrůša makes his Celebrity Series debut, and the orchestra has appeared on the Series once before, in the 1983/84 season. It’s a rare treat to welcome them back to Boston.
The Bamberg Symphony celebrates its Bohemian roots and touts its unique quality: the “Bamberg sound.” It’s at once dark and lustrous, with rich lower strings and distinctive horns. The orchestra lends its might and expressiveness to two works by Wagner that open and close the program: the Lohengrin prelude and the Tannhäuser overture.
The orchestra recorded Brahms’ Third Symphony in 2019, with Hrůša drawing praise from Gramophone for the “suppleness and warm intimacy” of his account.
Pianist Lukáš Vondráček joins the orchestra for Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor. In his most recent Boston appearance in 2022 with the BSO, also under Hrůša’s baton, The Boston Globe praised his “glittering, featherweight passagework” and “overall command of the work’s dark, rhetorical drama.”
Program notes to come.
Program notes to come.
Program notes to come.
Program notes to come.
“When someone is as empathetic, and extraordinarily equipped, and at the same time as experienced as Jakub Hrůša, with a perceptive and well-disposed orchestra, he can allow himself to reach for a rarely heard mature musical brilliance – on-the-edge tempos, sound modelled in a huge dynamic range, a spontaneous freedom of solos and ensemble … many beautiful details, both prepared and improvised.”
KlasikaPlus, January 2024
“Hrůša’s accounts of both Brahms’s Third and Fourth symphonies share a distinctly elegiac, restrained tone, yet in this new recording the restraint feels quintessentially – and quite touchingly – Brahmsian. There’s a suppleness and sense of warm intimacy… ”
Gramophone
with piano soloist Clayton Stephenson and the Berklee Contemporary Symphony
Race and Song: A Musical Conversation, featuring Boston City Singers
featuring youth ensembles from Boston Music Project, City Strings United, and Project STEP
in Cambridge, MA
in Groton, MA