Alain Altinoglu | Direction |
Manuela Uhl | Soprano |
Jacquelyn Wagner | Soprano |
Ilse Eerens | Soprano |
Nora Gubisch | Mezzo-soprano |
Marvic Monreal | Mezzo-soprano |
Corby Welch | Ténor |
Christopher Maltman | Baryton |
Gábor Bretz | Basse |
Orchestre Symphonique de la Monnaie | |
Belgian National Orchestra | |
Chœur de la Monnaie | |
Chœur de la Radio Flamande | |
Emmanuel Trenque | Chef de chœur |
Chœurs d’enfants et de jeunes de la Monnaie | |
Benoît Giaux | Chef de chœur |
An extraordinarily large orchestra, two mixed choruses, a children’s chorus and eight soloists: you can be sure that every square centimetre on the stage at Bozar will be used to perform the Sinfonie der Tausend.
In the summer of 1906, Gustav Mahler retreated to his composing hut on the Wörthersee, waiting for inspiration. When his eye fell on the Whitsun hymn Veni Creator Spiritus, he suddenly had a vision, as if an entire composition had been whispered to him from above. Overpowered by a feverish urge, he wrote his monumental Symphony No. 8 in just a few days.
But as impressive as the orchestra is how Mahler exploits his abundant means. Using a broad spectrum of colour and expression, the composer paints a symphonic universe that seems to transcend the earthly in its search for other places. ‘Try to imagine the whole universe beginning to ring and resound’, Mahler wrote. ‘There are no longer human voices, but planets and suns revolving.’