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Concert

Thu
16
May 24

Honorary conductor Herbert Blomstedt conducts Bruckner

Abo B
Bamberg, Konzerthalle, Joseph-Keilberth-Saal
18:00 Uhr

It was an ongoing issue for Bruckner to overcome the torment of his soul: the introverted loner suffered because no woman ever wanted to have anything »serious« to do with him – and he was also humiliated by the constant critique of his works. Therefore, his symphonies seem for large parts like epiphanies of a man struggling with himself. Herbert Blomstedt says that they represent »the longing for the eternal« and that Bruckner »takes listeners into a world« that »they otherwise might never reach«: »It is the world of his very own imagination. This is where you meet his soul. And he discovered this world through music, not through religion. He believed in the fugue, in the hymn, in the symphonic way of expressing himself. He overcame his life crises with this confession.« Our honorary conductor guides us through Bruckner‘s deep eighth symphony, which he began right after the tremendous success of his seventh contribution to the genre. The painstakingly gained self-confidence, however, once again collapsed like a house of cards. In 1885, the now sixty-something bachelor hoped to have finally found happiness in love – but his luck ran out again: His young beloved, whom he did not kiss but with whom he exchanged photographs, pulled away – and did not accept the dedication of the symphony. Then the conductor Hermann Levi declined to perform it and recommended a revision, which deeply offended Bruckner. The symphony was ultimately dedicated to Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria and performed for the first time in Vienna in 1892 – fortunately a triumph for Bruckner. This symphony, described by himself as a »mystery«, captivates with unbridled climaxes and dynamic contrasts – but also with intimate soul paintings such as the Adagio.

Herbert Blomstedt Conductor

Anton Bruckner Symphonie Nr. 8 c-Moll

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