Programme
Edward Elgar
Introduction and Allegro for strings
Julian Anderson
Symphony No. 2 ›Prague Panoramas‹
Antonín Dvořák
Cello Concerto in B minor
Artists
Robin Ticciati
- Steven Isserlis – Violoncello
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
About the concert
Written largely in the USA but first performed in London in 1896, Antonín Dvořák’s Cello Concerto belongs in a sense to the composer’s transitional phase between the Old and New Worlds. Musicologists will probably never agree on whether the works created during Dvořák’s stay in New York are American or, even more so, Czech or Bohemian in character. However, a clear answer to the question is not necessary. Homesickness is a long-established artistic productive force that need not preclude the absorption of new influences. After the two contributions to the genre by Haydn and the only one by Schumann, the Czech composer’s Cello Concerto is only the fourth work of its kind to establish itself in the core repertoire. The impression of wide landscapes, which may indeed be due to Dvořák’s American experience, the voluptuous late-Romantic intonation and the symphonic dimensions give the Concerto a place of honour in the programmes played by great cellists. Englishman Steven Isserlis, who can be heard this evening with the DSO under the direction of Music Director Robin Ticciati, has belonged to this group for decades.

Broadcast
Friday, 18.11.2022 | 8.03 pm (live)

8 pm
19.10 Uhr Einführung mit Habakuk Traber
Philharmonie Berlin
8 pm
19.10 Uhr Einführung mit Habakuk Traber
Philharmonie Berlin

Broadcast
Friday, 18.11.2022 | 8.03 pm (live)
