Conductor Laureate Esa-Pekka Salonen leads the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra in a magnificent concert where Bach, Beethoven and Sibelius meet the sounds of today. Celebrated pianist Terés Löf interprets a part of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 32, and star violinist Johan Dalene plays the prelude from Bach’s third Partita for Solo Violin. In Anders Hillborg’s Kongsgard Variations and Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Fog, we’ll meet two contemporary reflections of Beethoven and Bach. The concert ends with Jean Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2. Today’s talk is broadcast from Denmark’s national library, the Black Diamond, where author Carsten Jensen meets Berwaldhallen’s Josef Beltzikoff in a conversation about Jensens latest book, Øvelser i afsked: en coronakrønike (Exercises in Saying Goodbye: a Corona Chronicle). Is it possible to find strength for collective change in a personal loss?
Click on the chapter markers on the timeline to jump to a new part of the broadcast
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra
Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductor
Terés Löf, piano
Johan Dalene, violin
Music Producer Jan B Larsson
Music Engineer Johan Hyttnäs, Erland von Heijne
Concert:
Live Mixing Producer Ulf Sandlund
Photographers Karl Thorson, Ulf Sandlund
Score supervisor Aurélie Ferrière
Web Publishing Ulrica Stjernqvist, Katarina Huss, Kristina Högberg
Streaming Technician Henrik Skogsmark
Lighting Engineer Rickard Gabrielsson
Baltic Sea Studio:
Host Erik Blix
Producer Anna Hedelius
Visual Production Staffan Engwall, Mikael Koff
Sound Technician Jesper Windmar
Studio Design Ulf Sandlund
Studio Host Kajsa Hallhagen
Project Manager Baltic Sea Festival Emma Nyberg, Kajsa Hallhagen
Project Manager Berwaldhallen Play Karl Thorson
Project Manager Web Ulrica Stjernqvist
Production Leader Henrik Nilsson
Artistic Planning Christian Thompson
The talk between Carsten Jensen and Josef Beltzikoff was produced by The Royal Library in Copenhagen.
Regarding Chromecast via iPhone
You can use Chromecast for the broadcasts on Berwaldhallen Play from computers and Android phones, but not if you play the concert from Apple’s iPhone. This is due to built-in limitations in the iPhone. If you want to see our concerts on a TV and have an iPhone, Apple’s own transfer technology (AirPlay) via an Apple TV works well.