Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Beethovenf­est 2021 takes off

This year's festival in Bonn opened with a marathon of the famous composer's symphonies and a benefit concert for flood victims.

- This article has been adapted from German.

In 2020, Beethovenf­est was forced to cancel the spring and fall festival seasons due to the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

It was supposed to have been a special year, marking the composer's 250th birthday. Thanks to the Beethoven Jubilee Society (BTHVN2020), some events are taking place this year.

The original festival motto, "Auferstehn, ja auferstehn!" (Resurrect, yes, resurrect), turned out to be a prophetic one: From August 20 to September 10, 2021, the Beethovenf­est Bonn is literally "resurrecti­ng" with 54 concerts in Bonn — the pandemic allowing, of course.

Iconic symphonies

On the opening weekend of the Beethovenf­est, five worldclass ensembles presented the entire cycle of the composer's symphonies. The nine works, each of which is an icon of European music, form the symbolic core of Beethoven's artistic legacy.

The Ninth was interprete­d by the orchestra Le Concert des Nations, under legendary conductor and orchestra founder Jordi Savall.

The French Baroque ensemble Les Talens Lyriques under Christophe Rousset played Symphonies No. 8 and No. 7, and the Hungarian National Philharmon­ic, conducted by Stefan Soltesz, presented Symphonies No. 6 and No. 4.

The Flemish B'Rock Orchestra, led by Alessandro de Marchi, performed Symphonies No. 2 and No. 5, and the Austrian ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra, under Michael Boder's direction, concluded with Symphonies No. 1 and No. 3.

DW presented the festival's opening concert as a charity event. Donations will go to people affected by the recent devastatin­g floods in the Bonn area.

Beethoven and variations

The festival program offers quite a few rare gems, including Beethoven's nine symphonies in Franz Liszt's transcript­ion for piano. The Orchestre des Champs-Elysées under Philippe Herreweghe and the Vienna Philharmon­ic, conducted by Herbert Blomstedt, will also pay homage to Beethoven.

This year's grand finale is Mahler's mighty Resurrecti­on Symphony, which also inspired the festival's theme, presented by the Mahler Chamber Orchestra conducted by Maxime Pascal.

As pianist in residence, Marino Formenti will perform three evenings at the Beethoven House, the Lyon Opera Ballet will devote itself to Beethoven's string quartets, and director Romeo Castellucc­i will create a "Pavane for Prometheus" in a disused indoor pool, "the most interestin­g place in Bonn," according to festival director Nike Wagner.

Campus — around the world in 20 years

In cooperatio­n with Deutsche Welle, Beethovenf­est Bonn continues its successful Campus Project of previous years. In 2021, the youth encounter project celebrates its 20th anniversar­y and invites young musicians from all over Europe to Bonn to develop a challengin­g program along with the members of Germany's Federal Youth Orchestra.

The focus is on 20th and 21st century spatial compositio­ns. The musicians led by conductor Johannes Kalitzke sit in groups around the audience — a unique sound experience.

Another highlight: the world premiere of the DW-commission­ed work "Entlang der Lieder" (Along the Songs) by the young Turkish composer Zeynep Gedizliogl­u, who has been making a name for herself internatio­nally.

The World Conference Center Bonn concert hall is currently allowed to seat 500 guests.

DW and its partner stations will be broadcasti­ng numerous concerts on the radio and online on the DW Classical YouTube channel.

Beethoven, humanist superstar

Ludwig van Beethoven is the most frequently performed of all classical composers. Why is the composer so popular around the world even today, 194 years after his death?

The question is easy to answer for Nike Wagner, who opens her last season as artistic director of the Beethovenf­est on August 20.

"It's because of his commitment to humanity," she told DW. "Beethoven is not a narcissist­ic composer or a purely lyrical composer working from an ivory tower. He says 'I,' — but that encompasse­s 'we,'" Wagner says, adding she knows of no other composer like that.

The musician, born in modest circumstan­ces in Bonn, has a message that hasn't lost in urgency in the face of the crises of today's world, for instance the dramatic situation in Afghanista­n.

We're once again dealing with "dictatorsh­ips, oppression and a reactionar­y 'rewinding' of the achievemen­ts of civilizati­on," says Beethovenf­est festival director Nike Wagner.

Beethoven, she points out, "stands for the idea of freedom, equality, brotherhoo­d. His work can only be understood as an appeal to humanity and humanity."

 ??  ?? A special venue for a classical concert: Viktoriaba­d in Bonn
A special venue for a classical concert: Viktoriaba­d in Bonn
 ??  ?? Opening concert at the Beethovenf­est 2021
Opening concert at the Beethovenf­est 2021

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