Rattle was joined by his Czech-born wife, the
mezzo-soprano, Magdalena Kozena, in a program at Berlin's wooded
outdoor amphitheatre, the Waldbuehne, that included works by
George Gershwin, Joseph Cantaloube, and Aram Khachaturian.
The British-born maestro, now 63, has already started a new job
as music director of the London Symphony Orchestra, but will
continue to live in Berlin with his family.
The Berlin orchestra was "born in struggle and will always be in
that state", Rattle said in an interview published on the
Philharmonic's website.
He said the orchestra was unlike any other he had worked with,
more like "an absolutely gigantic string quartet, with all the
arguments and verbal violence and frustrations".
Even after a decade-and-a-half in charge, Rattle said it was
still a mystery to him how the orchestra worked, but it had
ultimately embraced more educational outreach, a wider
repertoire and new programming.
With live streaming and an appeal to students, the orchestra had
shed its elite image and opened itself to be "more cosmopolitan
and diverse", Berlin's Tagesspiegel newspaper said.
BEATING HEART
"The world has changed an enormous amount. And they are in an
incredibly privileged position, whether they realize it or not.
I think they are now more part of the beating heart of the
city," Rattle said of the Philharmonic.
The conductor thanked "my wonderful orchestra" and "my dear
Berlin public" at a performance on Wednesday at the orchestra's
concert hall.
On Saturday, thousands of people had braved driving rain to
attend a full dress rehearsal, instead of watching the German
team play in the World Cup.
With 34 performances, Symphony No. 2 by Johannes Brahms was the
most played work of Rattle's tenure, followed by Beethoven's 9th
Symphony, which was performed 26 times.
During his years as conductor, 53 new musicians joined the
orchestra, and it performed 40 world premieres.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Andrew Bolton)
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