Event Details

Add Us on MySpace Refer a Friend & Earn $1
back  Back to Boston

Boston Baroque Performs Haydn's The Creation

Title: Boston Baroque Performs Haydn's The Creation
Venue: Jordan Hall (Boston, MA)
Full Price: $25.00 - $38.00   Our Price: $12.50 - $19.00
Rating: 4.0 stars

Rated 4.0 by 1 member who went.

Haydn's Creation — one of the greatest works of the choral repertoire — closes Boston Baroque's season on a grand note. At the time of its premiere, Haydn was already considered the greatest living composer and this oratorio was seen as his crowning achievement.

All dates for this event have expired. (find current Classical events)
The last event was Saturday, May. 3 2008 @ 8:00pm. (view all dates)

DON'T MISS OUT ON ANY MORE EVENTS!

Members Who Went Said:

4 Star Rating
Written on
May 05 2008

Eugene M.

Eugene M.

Cultural Maven

Wonderful, an unforgettable performance. The soloists were truly outstanding, as was the orchestra.

0 of 0 people found this review useful
Useful Not Useful Report

More Details About This Event:

Haydn tells us that every day during its composition, he would pray that he could sustain the highest level of inspiration, and indeed he succeeded, from the opening depiction of chaos through the creation of a new world.

Sari Gruber, soprano
Brian Stucki, tenor
Kevin Deas, bass-baritone

About Boston Baroque:

Three-time Grammy nominee Boston Baroque—the first permanent Baroque orchestra established in North America—is now widely regarded as this country's leading period-instrument orchestra and chorus. The ensemble's performances and recordings of the Baroque and Classical repertoire have been acclaimed from Boston to London, from New York to Vienna to Sao Paulo for their freshness, virtuosity, and exuberant appeal.

Founded in 1973 by Martin Pearlman, Boston Baroque presents an annual subscription concert series in Greater Boston and reaches an international audience with its critically acclaimed recording series on Telarc. Boston Baroque made its European debut in April 2003, performing Handel's Messiah to sold-out houses and standing ovations in Krakow and Warsaw, Poland. The ensemble celebrated its thirtieth anniversary in 2003-2004 with a tour of the Monteverdi Vespers to major American music centers, including the Tanglewood and Ravinia Festivals and its West Coast debut in Los Angeles's Disney Hall.

Boston Baroque's many career milestones include the American premiere of Rameau's Zoroastre; the American period-instrument premieres of Mozart's Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute, and Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and Violin Concerto; and the modern premiere of The Philosopher's Stone, a singspiel newly discovered to include music by Mozart and to shed fresh light on his canon. From 2000-2003, Boston Baroque presented Boston's first complete cycle of the surviving operas of Monteverdi.

Boston Baroque's recordings are heard by millions on classical radio stations throughout this country. Fanfare magazine called its recording of Bach's Brandenburg Concertos "a set to treasure...it belongs on the shelf of every lover of the Baroque." The Bach Orchestral Suites were an Editor's Choice at Gramophone, which cited their "virtuosity and elan." The premier recording of The Philosopher's Stone was an Opera News Editor's Choice, and was called by Fanfare "a valuable and utterly fascinating release" in which the "standard of performance...rises frequently to the level of the spectacular." Boston Baroque's recording of Messiah was Classic CD's number one recommendation in its 1997 review of the crowded field of Messiah recordings. Billboard magazine called Gluck's Iphigenie en Tauride "a superb production [and] cause for celebration...takes pride of place among readings of Iphigenie en Tauride, if not among all Gluck operas on record." The first period-instrument recording of Robert Levin's completion of the Mozart Requiem was named one of the three most important classical CDs of 1995 by CD Review. Three Boston Baroque recordings have been Grammy finalists: Handel's Messiah (1992); Monteverdi's Vespers of 1610 (1998); and Bach's Mass in B Minor (2000).

Boston Baroque is the resident professional ensemble for Boston University's Historical Performance Program, where it is helping to train the next generation of period-instrument performers.

About Jordan Hall:

Acoustically superb Jordan Hall is the heart and soul of New England Conservatory and has been central to the musical life of New England since its opening on October 20, 1903. The 1,013-seat hall was a gift of Conservatory trustee Eben D. Jordan, 2nd, and was designed by architect Edmund Wheelwright, following the model of the European court concert halls of the Renaissance.

NEC's Jordan Hall is a classroom, laboratory, and gathering place where New England Conservatory's most important learning takes place, offering Conservatory students the opportunity to launch their careers in one of the world's favorite performing spaces.

In 1994, the United States Congress recognized the seminal role of New England Conservatory in the development of American musical culture by awarding National Historic Landmark designation to both the school and Jordan Hall itself. The hall has won numerous awards since it restoration in 1995, including the 1996 Massachusetts Historical Commission Preservation Award, the Victorian Society in America's Preservation Commendation, the 1996 Boston Preservation Alliance Award, the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America Award of Merit, and the Illuminating Engineering Society 1996 Lumen Award.