Sinfonieorchester Basel
Steven Isserlis, violoncello
Jukka-Pekka Saraste, conductor
William Walton (1902-1983):
Concerto for cello and orchestra (1957)
Gustav Mahler (1860−1911):
Symphony No. 1 in D major (1888)
William Walton’s cello concerto was the third and final solo concerto the composer wrote for a string instrument. The melancholy late work was commissioned by the cellist Gregor Piatigorsky. As a teenager, Piatigorsky had dared the adventurous escape from Russia into a new life and later managed to rise out of homelessness to become a soloist with the Berlin Philharmonic. The cello concerto was created in a close collaboration between the two friends.
If one believes Schönberg’s judgment of the symphonist Mahler, then «actually everything that will characterize him is already there in the first symphony; his ‹melody of life› can already be heard, which he takes to the highest development, as well as the surrender to nature and thoughts of death. » Mahler had initially named his first symphony Titan – a hymn of praise for God’s creation, for life with all its ups and downs. In the original programme, the composer writes about the «awakening of nature from long winter sleep», «spring without end» and the progress of life «in full sail. » The concert audience at the time, however, met Mahler’s departure into a new symphonic era with incomprehension.
AUFBRUCH
Symphony Concert
Donnerstag, 23 Juni 2022
19:30
06:30 PM: Introduction to the concert (in German) with Hans-Georg Hofmann