November 28, 2024
Athens, GR 14 C
Expand search form
Blog

A broken shoulder rest? No problem for Gidon Kremer

A broken shoulder rest? No problem for Gidon Kremer

Between movements of the Mieczyslaw Weinberg violin concerto with the London Philharmonic Orchestra last night,, Gidon Kremer paused to adjust his shoulder rest – only for the wretched thing to break in half.

‘Never happened to me before in 60 years on stage,’ Gidon tells slippedisc.com. Happily one of the first violins gave up a suitable rest and Kremer was able to finish a momentous performance of the work.

He followed it with a muted miniature by Valentin Silvestrov, ‘to remind us of the suffering in Ukraine’.

Who said politics and music don’t mix? The second half of the concert consisted of Shostakovich’s Babi Yar symphony, an indictment of Soviet anti-semitism and other abuses. Andrei Boreyko conducted an imposing account of the hour-long work with soloist Alexander Roslavets and an impressive LPO male chorus.

The post A broken shoulder rest? No problem for Gidon Kremer appeared first on Slippedisc.

Previous Article

Semi-festival links up with Opera North

Next Article

Maestro quits abruptly in Spain

You might be interested in …

Israel Phil calls off gala opening

Israel Phil calls off gala opening

The orchestra has informed patrons that its season-opening concerts last night and today in Tel Aviv are off  ‘in vew of the extreme security situation’. The concerts featured Mendelssohn’s violin concerto with Maxim Vengerov and […]

The BBC’s fastest selling Proms

The BBC’s fastest selling Proms

This weekend saw record online sales for the 2024 Proms. The following concerts were the hottest tickets: First Night of the Proms conducted by Elim Chan (19 July), Everybody Dance! The Sound of Disco (20 […]