In November 2003, I attended a performance of Mahler's 6th Symphony in Liverpool with the RLPO conducted by Gerard Schwarz. I travelled to the hall thinking, well, this is very familiar, but I can glory in the sheer power of it...
By the end of the 1st movement I was - unexpectedly - very caught up in the drama, I recall whispering to my companion, "wow!, wow!"
I sensed something amiss during the andante - a movement always very much a part of me... my heart was beating very fast, and each agonised twist in the movement's progressions (you know the ones!) made things even more tense. I began to feel I understood every bar of this music far too well, far too intensely. So to the finale... the sense of foreboding, the dread, the crushing darkness of the introduction was terrible - quite overwhelming. My heart was beating so fast I could scarcely feel the separate beats, I felt sick and dizzy - "don't feel too well..." I muttered to my friend, and - left the hall, to sit gloomily in the bar, where I soon recovered, but didn't go back in. I just made out dimly, the hammer blows, and began to feel awful misgivings...
In Sainsburys car park the next day - "back to life, back to reality" - I burst into tears of bitter regret, and although the performance was repeated the following day I didn't dare to go back. But I came to love the piece even more through listening at home. I eventually had a grand rapprochement with the 6th in 2010, with Petrenko, back in the same position in the same hall. That too - the whole day - was a remarkable experience, but it's also another story!
Others here must have had strange, intense, perhaps similar experiences...
So tell us your stories of the extreme, bizarre, odd or even funny things you've seen or experienced yourself at live concerts...
By the end of the 1st movement I was - unexpectedly - very caught up in the drama, I recall whispering to my companion, "wow!, wow!"
I sensed something amiss during the andante - a movement always very much a part of me... my heart was beating very fast, and each agonised twist in the movement's progressions (you know the ones!) made things even more tense. I began to feel I understood every bar of this music far too well, far too intensely. So to the finale... the sense of foreboding, the dread, the crushing darkness of the introduction was terrible - quite overwhelming. My heart was beating so fast I could scarcely feel the separate beats, I felt sick and dizzy - "don't feel too well..." I muttered to my friend, and - left the hall, to sit gloomily in the bar, where I soon recovered, but didn't go back in. I just made out dimly, the hammer blows, and began to feel awful misgivings...
In Sainsburys car park the next day - "back to life, back to reality" - I burst into tears of bitter regret, and although the performance was repeated the following day I didn't dare to go back. But I came to love the piece even more through listening at home. I eventually had a grand rapprochement with the 6th in 2010, with Petrenko, back in the same position in the same hall. That too - the whole day - was a remarkable experience, but it's also another story!
Others here must have had strange, intense, perhaps similar experiences...
So tell us your stories of the extreme, bizarre, odd or even funny things you've seen or experienced yourself at live concerts...
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