Elbphilharmonie 28 February 2021 - NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester / Barnatan / Gilbert | GoComGo.com

NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester / Barnatan / Gilbert

Elbphilharmonie, Grosser Saal, Hamburg, Germany
All photos (3)
Select date and time
8 PM
Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Hamburg, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
Duration:

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Programme
Michael Gordon: Dystopia
John Adams: Must the Devil Have All the Good Tunes?
Lisa Streich: New Work
Overview

At the end, the Elbphilharmonie Visions festival will once again be brand new: With his NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester, chief conductor and festival initiator Alan Gilbert will premiere a new work by Lisa Streich. The 35-year-old Swede wrote it on behalf of the Claussen Simon Foundation in Hamburg, whose composition prize she will receive at the festival. In addition, Gilbert presents the fast-paced music of his American compatriots Michal Gordon and John Adams.

Lisa Streich was born in Sweden in 1985 and composes extremely absorbing, sensual music. It does not restrict the listener through programmatic headings and yet develops an intense expressiveness that speaks immediately. This is about the essential. Alan Gilbert and his orchestra musicians saw it that way when they tried out pieces by several candidates in a discovery session. Lisa Streich was therefore unanimously awarded the newly donated composition prize, which goes hand in hand with a world premiere as part of "Elbphilharmonie Visions".

"Does the devil have to have all the good melodies?" Asks John Adams in the title of his latest piano concerto, which premiered in Los Angeles in 2019. “It's true, the 'devil' John Adams still does the same trick. But what a devil! And what tricks! ”Said the Los Angeles Times. In a kind of funky dance of death, Adams plunges into the hustle and bustle of a modern city with driving rhythms, seductive scraps of pop and comments on a detuned honky-tonk piano. To break through a metropolis like Los Angeles at top speed (of course only in the musical-metaphorical sense) was Michal Gordon's declared goal. His work "Dystopia" was first heard in the portrayed city in 2008 and is also picking up speed in Hamburg.

Venue Info

Elbphilharmonie - Hamburg
Location   Platz der Deutschen Einheit 4

The Elbphilharmonie (Elbe Philharmonic Hall) is a concert hall in the HafenCity quarter of Hamburg, Germany, on the Grasbrook peninsula of the Elbe River. It is one of the largest and acoustically most advanced concert halls in the world. It is popularly nicknamed Elphi.

The new glassy construction resembles a hoisted sail, water wave, iceberg or quartz crystal resting on top of an old brick warehouse (Kaispeicher A, built in 1963) near the historical Speicherstadt. The project is the result of a private initiative by the architect and real estate developer Alexander Gérard and his wife Jana Marko, an art historian, who commissioned the original design by the Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron. and developed and promoted the project (since 2003 in cooperation with the Hamburg-based real estate developer and investor Dieter Becken) for 3,5 years until the City of Hamburg decided to develop the project by itself. It is the key project of the new Hafencity development and the tallest inhabited building in Hamburg, with a final height of 108 metres (354 ft).

The Elbphilharmonie was officially inaugurated with concerts of the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra and a light show on 11 January 2017.

History

On 2 April 2007, the foundation stone was laid in the warehouse Kaispeicher A, in the presence of then First Mayor of Hamburg Ole von Beust, Hochtief Construction AG CEO Henner Mahlstedt, the project coordinator for the City of Hamburg Hartmut Wegener (dismissed in 2008 for mismanagement of the project), Hamburg Minister of Culture Karin von Welck and architect Pierre de Meuron.

In 2007, the construction was scheduled to be finished by 2010 with an estimated cost of €241 million. In November 2008, after the original contract was amended, the costs for the project were estimated at €450 million. In August 2012, the costs were re-estimated to be over €500 million, which should also cover the increased cost for a strengthened roof. Construction work officially ended on 31 October 2016 at a cost of €866 million.

The first public test concert at the Elbphilharmonie was held on 25 November 2016. The official opening concert took place on 11 January 2017 with a performance by the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra under direction of Thomas Hengelbrock. The first musical selection was "Pan" from Benjamin Britten's Six Metamorphoses after Ovid.

Building

The building is designed as a cultural and residential complex. The original 1966 brick façade of the Kaispeicher A, formerly a warehouse, was retained at the base of the building. On top of this a footprint-matching superstructure rests on its own foundation exhibiting a glassy exterior and a wavy roof line. About one thousand glass windows are curved. The building has 26 floors with the first eight floors within the brick façade. It reaches its highest point with 108 meters at the western side. The footprint of the building measures 120,000 m2. A curved escalator from the main entrance at the east side connects the ground floor with an observation deck, the Plaza, at the 8th floor, the top of the brick section. The Plaza is accessible by the public. It offers a view of Hamburg and the Elbe. From the Plaza the foyer of the concert hall can be reached.

The Elbphilharmonie has three concert venues. The Great Concert Hall can accommodate 2,100 visitors whereby the performers are in the center of the hall surrounded by the audience in the vineyard style arrangement. The acoustics were designed by Yasuhisa Toyota who installed about 10,000 individually microshaped drywall plates to disperse sound waves. The Great Concert Hall contains a pipe organ with 69 registers built by Klais Orgelbau. The Recital Hall is intended for the performance of recitals, chamber music and jazz concerts; it can hold an audience of 550 people. In addition, there is the Kaistudio that allows for 170 visitors and is intended to serve educational activities. The consultant for the scenography of the concert hall was Ducks Scéno.

The easternmost part of the building is rented by Westin as the Westin Hamburg Hotel that opened on 4 November 2016. The hotel offers 244 rooms between the 9th and 20th floors. The lobby in the 8th floor can be accessed from the Plaza. The upper floors west of the concert hall accommodate 45 luxury apartments. The complex also houses conference rooms, restaurants, bars, and a spa. A parking garage for 433 cars is part of the building complex as well.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Hamburg, Germany
Starts at: 20:00
Duration:
Top of page