Israel Philharmonic pivots
The musicians performed Hatikvah, Paul Ben-Haim's Fanfare to Israel and Beethoven's 3rd Symphony, Eroica.
(Times of Israel) – The opening of the Israel Philharmonic’s 87th season was delayed due to the war in Gaza, but the orchestra quickly pivoted, performing in trios and quartets for evacuated families from Gaza border communities and northern towns, and for those who were injured and hospitalised.
At times they even put down their instruments and spent time picking avocados and tomatoes for farmers in need. In one moving performance, horn player Hagai Shalom played the haunting sounds of Oseh Shalom in the dark and empty Charles Bronfman Auditorium in Tel Aviv.
And on October 22, the orchestra gathered together for a live broadcast concert, playing to the faces of the hostages, their photos placed on the front row seats. Maestro Lahav Shani spoke to viewers during the broadcast, reminding them of the philharmonic’s history, founded in 1936 as many Jewish musicians faced rising antisemitism in Europe.
The musicians performed Hatikvah, Paul Ben-Haim’s Fanfare to Israel and Beethoven’s 3rd Symphony, Eroica.
Shani remarked on the fact that the philharmonic has witnessed all the wars in Israel, and that it seems impossible to contain so much distress and anguish alongside the hope and yearning for life. Music can contain and reflect all the different feelings, side by side, he said, referring to the “tremendous emotional complexity” in Beethoven’s Eroica.
“In Beethoven, there is room for lament, grief and loss, alongside hope, heroism, inner strength and fortitude,” said Shani. “His message is one of brotherhood and solidarity. And solidarity is the source of our strength.”
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