Claudio Abbado (1933–2014) was one of the outstanding personalities
in the history of the Berliner Philharmoniker. In May 2013, their unique
partnership ended with Abbado’s last concert with the orchestra. The
programme included two of the most important works of musical
Romanticism: Hector Berlioz’s visionary Symphonie fantastique and Felix Mendelssohn’s magical, shimmering music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
To mark the second anniversary of Claudio Abbado’s death on 20 January
2016, audio and video recordings of this memorable evening have been
released in a hardcover luxury edition. With comprehensive articles,
bonus videos and previously unpublished photographs, it documents
Abbado’s work with the orchestra whose chief conductor he was from 1990
to 2002.
The recordings impressively convey the
special atmosphere of the evening: the great affection the orchestra and
the audience had for Claudio Abbado – and of course the enthusiasm for
the musical performances. Renowned not least for his clever concert
programming, Abbado combined two works here that deal with the theme of
dreams in music in very different ways: Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream
conveys the multifaceted magical atmosphere of Shakespeare’s original,
while Berlioz uses modern means to tell his delirious tale of fateful
love and drug-induced hallucinations. Abbado’s performance brings out
the full splendour of these scores. It is – as the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
wrote – a “wonder, the freedom and youthful-like spirit with which the
soon to be octogenarian expends himself, which he radiates and which he
presents to his audience from the conductor’s stand.” (Berliner Philharmoniker Recordings)
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