Youtube And The Berlin Philharmonic

Want to see the Berlin Philharmonic this week at Disney Hall, but finding the tickets limited and pricey? Wish that Hulu could stream Rachmaninoff along with’30 Rock’? In all cases, the Berliners, who appear tonight and tuesday at Walt Disney Concert Hall, have the solution at what they call their Digital Concert Hall.

The 127-year-old band is familiar with technical advances — in 1980, the Berlin Philharmonic ( under the baton of Herbert von Karajan ) recorded the first classical CD. By the way you will need a Hotel Berlin to see them in the city.

Introduced early on in the year, the Digital Concert Hall was the brainchild of Olaf Maninger, a principal cellist and member of the orchestra’s Media Board. Needing to reach a new audience and improve the Philharmonic’s profile online, Maninger worked to get the support of Deutsche Bank to install cameras in the Philharmonie, the orchestra’s home concert hall, and support the webcasts.

Entry into the Digital Concert Hall isn’t free : A single performance goes for 9.90 euros ( $15 ), up to a’Season Pass,’ a full year of all-you-can hear concerts for 149 Euros ( $223 ). Besides simulcasts, healthy selections of the orchestra’s concerts since Aug 2008 are also available for streaming in the archive ( a genuine find is Gustavo Dudamel conducting a Stravinsky program from March ).

‘It’s not earning money yet,’ asserts Berlin’s PR Chief, Elisabeth Hilsdorf, who is in LA this week with the orchestra,’but it’s not merely an experiment ; the goal is for it to go on forever.’ Hilsdorf announces that the orchestra has been averaging about 2,000 people per event and wants 6,000 to seven thousand folk to come out quits.

After I saw creative director Simon Rattle conducting the Berlin Philharmonic three nights earlier this month at Carnegie Hall, the excitement of the Digital Concert Hall was seeing the video :

It offered high-resolution close-up perspectives of harp plucks and timpani rolls that you could not see even from that hall’s choicest seats. The downside-and with an orchestra as robust as Berlin, it’s a real downside-is the feeling of the musicmaking. For streaming audio, the Concert Hall sounds clear, but what cannot be captured digitally is the force of the sound waves. At Carnegie Hall, at one time during the orchestra’s playing of Brahms’ third Symphony, it felt as if the rhythms of myprivate body-my heartbeat and breathing-were succumbing to the pulse of the music.

even if the Concert Hall’s ‘s next’live’ event ( Zubin Mehta conducting on Dec. 6 ) shakes the Philharmonie’s rafters in Berlin, its unlikely to supply the same frisson for somebody watching on a home system. Still, for far less than aplane ticket, it does allow Angelenos an opportunity to experience Arnold Schoenberg’s pretty, spiky rarity,’Accompaniment to a Cinematographic Scene’ ( heard in new york, Boston and Ann Arbor-but not on the schedule at Disney Hall ). It’s on a program from earlier this month alongside Schoenberg’s engaging musical rendering of Brahms’ Piano Quintet No. 1 ( an old Rattle favorite, which he conducts live tonight at WDCH ).

What YouTube is for fans of cat videos, Berlin’s DCH is for fans of serious-and expertly played-German music.
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