Saturday, April 12, 2008

Scavenging at the Musikverein


An afternoon of glory, thanks to a last-minute ticket procured for the standing-room only section, in the Great Hall of the most beloved concert hall in the world, Vienna’s Musikverein. With its incomparable acoustics and stunning beauty, this home base for the Vienna Philharmonic was the location of many historic and important events---the world premieres of Brahms’ Second and Third Symphonies, Bruckners’ Second, Sixth, and Ninth Symphonies, Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, and the Violin Concerto by Tchaikovsky. Mahler conducted in this hall, Brahms sat in the left balcony. Today, the Vienna Philharmonic (a controversial orchestra, due to decades of excluding women from being hired full-time; I counted two in the string section today, so things must be improving) performed Béla Bartók’s last composition, Concerto for Viola and Orchestra, op. posth., with Tobias Lea as soloist and Riccardo Muti conducting. Bartok left sketches but died of leukemia before he could complete the work. Reconstructed from his notes, eventually in more than one version, the concerto embodies much of his life’s work as an ethnomusicologist and as a composer. Broad strokes of material related to his Concerto for Orchestra were woven into the orchestra. The strings were sublime; soloist and the winds encountered a few bumps with intonation in the first few minutes, but quickly found their sweet spot.

As I will depart for Brno tomorrow to give a few lectures in the Czech Republic, I left the hall at intermission, foregoing the second work on the program, Bruckner’s Symphony No. 2. But to savor the Bartok was splendid---not sure I'd want to hear Bruckner afterwards anyway.

For anyone coming to Vienna, tickets to concerts such as this one can be extremely difficult to find. The trick: arrive at the hall thirty minutes before the concert begins. You’ll likely see a few people standing outside, holding tickets they’d like to sell that otherwise won’t be used, in this case ranging from 5 Euros for standing room, to 60 Euros or more. The drill is to walk up to the ticket seller and inspect the price and the seat location. Only rarely will the seller accept an offer considerably less than the price on the ticket---that depends on the demand, your timing, and the seller’s mood. If you end up with a SRO ticket, you’re allowed into the hall before anyone else (VIP treatment for the standing room audience!). People make a beeline for the railing, where the best viewing spots are, saving their places by tying a scarf lengthwise on the rail, or draping a coat over it, and then heading to one of the adjoining rooms to partake of refreshments. I lucked out and quickly grabbed a spot near the middle, between two people who had given one another a little breathing space. As they say, name it and claim it.

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