Jun 01 2019
Bernstein & Beethoven, Part II

Bernstein & Beethoven, Part II

at Music Center at Strathmore

Esther Heideman, soprano
Shirin Eskandani, mezzo-soprano
Colin Eaton, tenor
Kevin Short, baritone
Enzo Baldanza, boy soprano

National Philharmonic Chorale
Piotr Gajewski, conductor

Bernstein – Chichester Psalms
Beethoven – Symphony No. 9 in D minor (“Choral”)

When the Reverend Walter Hussey, Dean of Chichester Cathedral in Sussex, commissioned Leonard Bernstein to compose a choral piece for the cathedral’s 1965 music festival, he added that “many of us would be very delighted if there was a hint of West Side Story about the music.” This was an unusual request for a piece of sacred music, which was intended for the combined cathedral choruses of Chichester, Winchester, and Salisbury. Bernstein obliged, and produced a joyful suite of choral settings of texts selected from the Psalms. In his own view, the Chichester Psalms was “the most accessible tonal piece I’ve ever written.” This magical work, combining Biblical Hebrew verse with the choral traditions of the Christian church, was a resounding success from the moment of its soldout premiere on July 15, 1965, conducted by Bernstein himself. Its companion piece in this second part of the Bernstein/Beethoven pairings is Beethoven’s monumental “Choral” Symphony No. 9, arguably the greatest symphony in the history of Western music. While the Chichester Psalms teems with the freshness and vigor of youth, the Symphony No. 9 probes the depths of the human soul, culminating with the most famous ode to joy in all music. In one of the decisive moments of the 20th century, Bernstein conducted Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 on Christmas Day 1989 in the “Ode to Freedom” concert celebrating the fall of the Berlin Wall and making a universal declaration of faith in the power of freedom to unite humankind. On that special occasion, the chorus replaced the word “joy” with “freedom.” In the same spirit, the Chichester Psalms represents “a visionary plea for reconciliation and unity throughout the world.”

Admission Info

Tickets start at $34

Kids age 7-17 are free. Visit nationalphilharmonic.org or visit/call the Strathmore Ticket Office (301) 637-2608.

Phone: 301-581-5100

Dates & Times

2019/06/01 - 2019/06/01

Location Info

Music Center at Strathmore

5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, MD 20852

Parking Info

For full parking information and directions, please visit www.strathmore.org/your-visit/directions-and-parking

Parking in the Grosvenor-Strathmore Metro garage is $5.20 during the week and free on weekends. Strathmore is also accessible via Metro's Red Line, Grosvenor-Strathmore station.

Limited short-term parking also is available at specially marked meters along Tuckerman Lane, which do not require payment after 7pm.