I’ve come across the details of a very rare/unlikely performance of E.J. Moeran’s Sinfonietta (1944) by the Berliner Philharmoniker under Hans-Joachim Wunderlich that took place at the Jagdschloß Grunewald in Berlin on Saturday 16th June 1956. Given the paucity of performances of English music that the Berliner Philharmoniker give I found this to be a most interesting detail.
At this time (1956) the Berliner Philharmoniker did not have regular concert hall as the Alte Philharmonie on Bernburger Straße had been destroyed by Allied bombing in 1944 resulting in the orchestra having to use a various halls, such as the Hochschule für Musik and the Titania-Palast, until the new Philharmonie was completed in 1963. Wilhelm Furtwängler had died in 1954 and Herbert von Karajan had recently taken over as principal conductor.
The remainder of the programme that night was:
Gluck: Ballet Suite (orch and selected by Mottl);
Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, K216 by soloist Manfred Scherzer;
Schmalstich: Serenade in B major for Strings, Op. 104;
Schubert: Rosamunde Overture;
At this time (1956) the Berliner Philharmoniker did not have regular concert hall as the Alte Philharmonie on Bernburger Straße had been destroyed by Allied bombing in 1944 resulting in the orchestra having to use a various halls, such as the Hochschule für Musik and the Titania-Palast, until the new Philharmonie was completed in 1963. Wilhelm Furtwängler had died in 1954 and Herbert von Karajan had recently taken over as principal conductor.
The remainder of the programme that night was:
Gluck: Ballet Suite (orch and selected by Mottl);
Mozart: Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major, K216 by soloist Manfred Scherzer;
Schmalstich: Serenade in B major for Strings, Op. 104;
Schubert: Rosamunde Overture;
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