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Voyage

The thou­sand at Tem­pel­hof

Tempelhof AirportBerlin, Allemagne
Dates/horaires selon le fuseau horaire de Berlin
jeudi 25 septembre 202519:30
vendredi 26 septembre 202519:30
Artistes
James GaffiganDirection
Christina NilssonSopranoMagna peccatrix
Penny SofroniadouSopranoUna poenitentium
Elisa MaayeshiSopranoMater gloriosa
Karolina GumosMezzo-sopranoMulier samaritana
Rachael WilsonMezzo-sopranoMaria aegyptiaca
Andrew StaplesTénorDoctor marianus
Hubert ZapiórBarytonPater ecstaticus
Andreas Bauer KanabasBassePater profundus
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Orchester der Komischen Oper Berlin
Chorsolisten der Komischen Oper Berlin
Vocalconsort Berlin
Rundfunkchor Berlin
David CaveliusChef de chœur
Kinderchor der Komischen Oper Berlin
Dagmar FiebachChef de chœur

‘Imagine that the universe is beginning to sound and resonate’, Gustav Mahler once said about his Eighth Symphony. This extraordinary work is often called the ‘Symphony of a Thousand’, because Mahler’s vision called for such a huge ensemble: two mixed choirs, a boys’ choir, eight soloists, a massive orchestra, an organ, and an additional brass section. ‘Veni, creator, spiritus!’ It is with this Pentecost hymn invoking the Holy Spirit that the symphony’s first movement begins. For the second movement, Mahler draws upon the final scene of Goethe’s Faust II: ‘The noble part of the spirit has been saved from evil’. Angels and other celestial ‘flight attendants’ lift Faust’s soul—rescued from the clutches of the devil—up to the realm of the ‘Eternal Feminine’. Faust, an early pioneer of grand visions and soaring ideas, fits perfectly into the industrial architecture of Tempelhof. It is here that Mahler’s Eighth Symphony will truly ‘sound and resonate’ as never before, especially with Music Director James Gaffigan himself in the cockpit, guiding our flight through Mahler’s universe.

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