Willem Pijper in Berliner Festspiele

Sunday, 4 September 2022   |   20:00 - 22:30

Willem Pijper in Berliner Festspiele

An organ, three pianos and eight horns. The huge cast for Willem Pijper’s Second Symphony deterred concert producers from performing it in his own time. Which makes it all the more exciting to be able to experience this rediscovery from the Dutch symphonic repertoire now in Berlin, performed by the Rotterdams Philharmonisch Orkest under Lahav Shani, in combination with works by Gustav Mahler and György Ligeti.

Willem Pijper was one of the leading Dutch composers in the first half of the 20th century – an innovative spirit, who would become one of the leading exponents of polytonality and was audibly influenced by Gustav Mahler: the tenor horn required behind the stage in his Second Symphony recalls his music (the “prophet from Mahler’s Seventh Symphony”, Pijper claimed) as do the mandolins that are specified in a long cast list. Willem Mengelberg, who had conducted the world premiere of Pijper’s First Symphony, turned down the Second – because of its gigantic cast whose requirements include an organ, three pianos, celesta and eight horns. Pijper himself took over, and on 2 November 1922 at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw he presented his monumental and thrilling work to a surprised public. The first movement has a rhythmic force in no way inferior to that of Igor Stravinsky’s “Sacre”, while the second, with its broken sequence of dances as if reflected in a hollow mirror, has an unreal quality.

After Pijper’s death, his pupil Karel Mengelberg completed a reduced version, in order to make it easier to perform (the original version requires at least 116 musicians). However, this felt like a mutilation. Almost one hundred years after the premiere of Pijper’s Second, Rotterdams Philharmonisch Orkest under the direction of its Principal Conductor Lahav Shani now performs the piece in its original version. After the interval, we will hear the music of Pijper’s idol: the First Symphony of Gustav Mahler, whose beginning of “natural sounds”, in the words of György Ligeti, “creates the imagination of an empty space”, before signal motifs are heard from a variety of different distances and directions. The Hungarian composer has acknowledged the influence of Mahler’s musical spatialisation – including on his revolutionary orchestral piece “Atmosphères”, a finely woven, micro-polyphonic fabric without melody or rhythm, that unfolds an overwhelming physicality in a spatially-conceived sound sculpture.

Concert Programme

György Ligeti (1923 – 2006)
Atmosphères (1961)
for large orchestra

Willem Pijper (1894 – 1947)
Symphony No. 2 (1921)
German premiere of the original version

Gustav Mahler (1860 – 1911)
Symphony No. 1 in D major (1888)
for large orchestra

  • Composer(s): Willem Pijper
  • Title(s) of the Work(s):

    Symphony no.2

  • Performer, Ensemble or Orchestra: Rotterdam Philharmonisch Orkest under Lava Shani

Date

Sep 04 2022
Expired!

Time

20:00 - 22:30

More Info

Read More

Location

Berlin, Berliner Philharmoniker
Berlin, Berliner Philharmoniker
Herbert-von-Karajan-Straße 1, 10785 Berlin, Germany
Website
https://www.berliner-philharmoniker.de/en/

Willem Pijper in Berliner Festspiele on Spotify

Willem Pijper in Berliner Festspiele on SoundCloud

Upcoming events

Friday, 14 February 2025. 20:00 - 21:30

Celia Swart / Ton de Leeuw

Something sizzles between the stones. It is the city, there is life.

Location

Delft, Nieuwe Kerk
Delft, Nieuwe Kerk
Markt 80, 2611 GW Delft, Netherlands
Website
https://www.oudeennieuwekerkdelft.nl

Friday, 14 February 2025. 11:30 - 24:30

Edward Top: Pots ‘n Pans Falling

AURA performs music that explores different viewpoints and perspectives. Canadian composer Edward Top’s “Pots ‘n Pans Falling” memorializes the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting.

Location

Houston, Rice University: Shepherd School of Music, Texas, USA
Houston, Rice University: Shepherd School of Music, Texas, USA
Rice University Shepherd School of Music - MS 532 P.O. Box 1892 Houston, TX 77251-1892
Website
https://music.rice.edu

Friday, 14 February 2025. 11:00 - 13:00

Victoria Vita Poleva: Symphony No. 3, White Interment

John Storgårds, conductor Gil Shaham, violin   Victoria POLEVÁ: Symphony No. 3, White Interment DVOŘÁK: Violin Concerto BRAHMS: Symphony No.

Location

Cincinnati, Cincinnati Music Hall, Ohio, USA
Cincinnati, Cincinnati Music Hall, Ohio, USA
650 Walnut Street Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
Website
https://www.cincinnatiarts.org/music-hall

Our Team’s Picks

Composers in the crosshairs of our attention

magnifiercrosschevron-down