Concert

Berliner Philharmoniker II

Kirill Petrenko, conductor
Xenakis / Hartmann / Illés / Kurtág

A shaft of black stone opens upwards to the light.

Cave in Mount Sodom, Israel © Benno Rothenberg / Meitar Collection / National Library of Israel / The Pritzker Family National Photography Collection / CC BY 4.0

In the Berliner Philharmoniker’s second concert programme conducted by Kirill Petrenko the world premiere of a new work by Márton Illés meets Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s apocalyptic “Gesangsszene”, and Iannis Xenakis’s monolithic stream of sound “Jonchaies” meets György Kurtág’s elegiac orchestral work “Stele”.

It is possibly the most brilliant orchestral work of the late 20th century: the “Jonchaies” (rushes) of the mathematician, engineer and composer Iannis Xenakis, in which a monolithic stream of sound gradually shifts into ever higher registers. However, this imposing sound sculpture never gives the impression of being the result of a scientific concept. Instead, the music feels more like a natural phenomenon that befalls the listeners – entirely in keeping with Xenakis’s statement: “It must be possible to feel a sensation of shock just like hearing thunder or looking down into a never-ending abyss.” Following Xenakis’s landmark composition, the Berliner Philharmoniker conducted by Kirill Petrenko will present a new orchestral work by Márton Illés, who was born in Budapest in 1975, is a past winner of the Ernst von Siemens Music Foundation’s Composers’ Prize and one of the most successful composers of his generation. Afterwards Christian Gerhaher will perform the “Gesangsszene” (Song Scene) for baritone and orchestra that Karl Amadeus Hartmann composed during the era of the nuclear arms race, the Cold War and widespread pollution of the environment, setting texts from Jean Giraudoux’s stage play “Sodom and Gomorrha”. The evening concludes with György Kurtág’s large-scale orchestral work “Stele”, which was written in memory of the deceased composer, conductor and teacher András Mihály: a lament that was composed for the Berliner Philharmoniker, in which personal grief is elevated onto a universal human level.

Concert Programme

Iannis Xenakis (1922 – 2001)
Jonchaies
for large orchestra (1977)

Márton Illés (*1975)
Lég-szín-tér
Commissioned by Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation, funded by Ernst von Siemens Musikstiftung
World premiere

Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905 – 1963)
Gesangsszene (1962/1963)
for baritone and orchestra to words from Sodom and Gomorrah by Jean Giraudoux

György Kurtág (*1926)
Stele op. 33 (1993/1994)

Work introduction 50 minutes before the start of each concert, South Foyer

A Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation event in cooperation with Berliner Festspiele / Musikfest Berlin
The concerts with contemporary works are part of the contemporary music month of the field notes initiative.