There are loads to choose from, but it might be interesting to read which single performance in the history of music people wish they could have attended.
The apparent 'dream concert' is of course that 22 December 1808 event at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna at which Beethoven premièred his 4th Piano Concerto, the 5th and 6th Symphonies, the Choral Fantasy plus other vocal and choral works. Well... yes... but it was apparently quite a shambles, freezing cold... I suspect it would have been rather a tragic spectacle as well as (obviously) fascinating.
No, my current "wish I'd been there" concert is the one at Carnegie Hall on 16 January 1910 when Rachmaninov played the second (or third, depending what authority you read) performance of his 3rd Piano Concerto with the New York Phil conducted by.... Mahler
A much better performance than the world première the previous autumn under Damrosch, apparently, with Rachmaninov recounting that Mahler and the orchestra happily practised the piece way beyond the supposed finish time for the rehearsal.
Would I have been waiting round the back to get my programme signed? ... I think so!!!
This was the complete programme:
16 January 1910
New York Philharmonic
Gustav Mahler, conductor
Sergei Rachmaninov, piano
Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3
Bach: Suite (arr. Mahler)
Wagner: “Prelude and Liebestod” from Tristan & Isolde
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
The apparent 'dream concert' is of course that 22 December 1808 event at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna at which Beethoven premièred his 4th Piano Concerto, the 5th and 6th Symphonies, the Choral Fantasy plus other vocal and choral works. Well... yes... but it was apparently quite a shambles, freezing cold... I suspect it would have been rather a tragic spectacle as well as (obviously) fascinating.
No, my current "wish I'd been there" concert is the one at Carnegie Hall on 16 January 1910 when Rachmaninov played the second (or third, depending what authority you read) performance of his 3rd Piano Concerto with the New York Phil conducted by.... Mahler
A much better performance than the world première the previous autumn under Damrosch, apparently, with Rachmaninov recounting that Mahler and the orchestra happily practised the piece way beyond the supposed finish time for the rehearsal.
Would I have been waiting round the back to get my programme signed? ... I think so!!!
This was the complete programme:
16 January 1910
New York Philharmonic
Gustav Mahler, conductor
Sergei Rachmaninov, piano
Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3
Bach: Suite (arr. Mahler)
Wagner: “Prelude and Liebestod” from Tristan & Isolde
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
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