Tag: Concert memories

  • Mann Center’s Golden Age of Classical Music

    Mann Center’s Golden Age of Classical Music

    There may be those among you who marvel at my ability to remember certain dates, such as the first time I saw André Watts in concert (as per yesterday’s post). The truth is I can’t remember everything, but I can certainly look it up!

    On the website for the Mann Center, there is a page devoted to past performers. Sadly, the programs themselves are not posted, but you can click through to jog your memory. Going back to the summer of ’84, you’ll note that the Philadelphia Orchestra performed at the outdoor venue, located in Fairmount Park, at least three times a week. Now you’re lucky if they appear there three times in a summer, and then it’s usually to accompany a film or play the “1812 Overture.”

    Back in the ’80s, you were guaranteed a truly satisfying crepuscular classical music experience. Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra. Berlioz’s “Les nuits d’été.” Falla’s “Nights in the Gardens of Spain.” Hanson’s “Romantic Symphony.” Ravel’s “Daphnis and Chloe.” Prokofiev’s “Alexander Nevsky.”

    Lawn tickets were free with a clipped coupon from the Philadelphia Inquirer, which could be redeemed at the old Visitor Center near City Hall.

    Picnicking was welcome and indeed encouraged. The downside, as always, were the other people, as there were always a few who thought the orchestra was there as backdrop for their conversation. (Thankfully, this was before cell phones!) Also, you had to get there, which meant getting out the car, if you had one, with all the hassle urban living entails.

    My heyday at the Mann was from 1984 to 1994. Sometimes I went with friends, sometimes with girlfriends, sometimes with family, and sometimes with coworkers. Once I went with an ex-girlfriend’s coworker. And at least once, I went alone, when I saw Lara St. John play the Korngold Violin Concerto. On the other half of the program was a substantial suite from “Star Wars.” This would have been before the prequels that were the beginning of the end for the franchise, and the opportunity to hear a substantial suite from the original film was a rarity.

    Seriously, click through that decade and see what it was like once. In addition to Watts, guest artists included Vladimir Ashkenazy, Jorge Bolet, Shura Cherkassky, Van Cliburn, Alicia de Larrocha, Rudolf Firkušný, James Galway, Gary Graffman, Birgit Nilsson, Jessye Norman, Itzhak Perlman, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Isaac Stern, Paul Tortelier, Tatiana Troyanos, Benita Valente, William Warfield, Pinchas Zukerman, and Los Romeros, to name a few.

    Since I have absolutely no interest in anyone the Mann books now, I would be hard-pressed to imagine anything that could ever draw me there again. But it was very nice while it lasted.

    https://manncenter.org/about/past-performers

  • Philadelphia Orchestra Memories

    Philadelphia Orchestra Memories

    It’s gotten to the point that I remember things I experienced 30-35 years ago more vividly than stuff I did 30-35 weeks ago. Even so, I will sometimes try to search for old concert reviews to confirm my memory of certain dates or performers or companion pieces on a given program.

    In the course of one of such search, I happened across this: Philadelphia Orchestra concert listings from the 1980s and ‘90s, the era that formed the peak of my Philadelphia concert attendance – first as one of those who stood in line for an hour and a half, in all weather, outside the old Academy of Music at Broad and Spruce Streets, for a shot at a $1.50 amphitheater ticket (later raised to $2.00); then as a young subscriber.

    How strange it is to revisit these programs from my current perspective, all these years later. On the one hand I can remember vividly being there in the hall, and the actual performances, as if next to no time has passed; on the other, not only does it seem so very distant, but like from another dimension entirely. Surely it is for elusive sensations like this that the word as “uncanny” was coined.

    Looking back, I realize afresh how lucky I was to be able to see and hear so many of the greats in action. I can’t say that I took everything for granted, but with the passage of time, one starts to realize how seldom certain pieces are played in concert and how indispensable individual talents are.

    Pay attention not only to the conductors, but also the soloists – some of them drawn from the orchestra’s personnel. So many no longer with us, or getting toward the end of their careers.

    https://concertannals.blogspot.com/2018/12/philadelphia-orchestra-subscription_13.html

    Those of you with even longer memories may appreciate this. Scroll down for Ormandy in the ‘50s:

    https://concertannals.blogspot.com/search/label/Philadelphia%20Orchestra


    PHOTO: Philadelphia’s Academy of Music, where I saw Mieczylslaw Horszowski, Rudolf Firkušný, Leon Fleisher, Alicia de Larrocha, Max Rudolf, Klaus Tennstedt, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Erich Leinsdorf, Oscar Shumsky, Isaac Stern, Paul Tortelier, Mstislav Rostropovich, Heinrich Schiff, Lynn Harrell, Jessye Norman, Luciano Pavarotti, John Shirley-Quirk, William Warfield, Gian Carlo Menotti, Einojuhani Rautuvaara, and so many others. Entrance to the amphitheater is toward the far right of the photo. If you were in line back to the poster on the front right of the building (seen center), you knew you were in. You just had to be sure to bring a coffee and a book. No cell phones then!

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