# Berkeley Symphony Orchestra at Zellerbach Hall Auditorium, December 5, 2013 [Berkeley Symphony Orchestra](http://www.berkeleysymphony.org/concerts/zellerbach-2/) 2013-12-05 [Zellerbach Hall Auditorium](http://www.calperfs.berkeley.edu/) [U.C. Berkeley, Bancroft Way at Telegraph Ave, Berkeley, CA](http://maps.google.com/maps?q=U.C.+Berkeley,+Bancroft+Way+at+Telegraph+Ave,+Berkeley,+CA&hl=en) 8:00 PM, Thursday, December 5, 2013 ## Set One [8:02 PM go; ensemble onstage and tuning; 8:04 PM lights down, announcements by René Mandel, then Joana Carneiro] ### Brett Dean: Carlo 01. [8:11 PM] Brett Dean (b.1961): _Carlo_ (1997) [work ends 8:31 PM] ### Haydn: Cello Concerto No. 1 [8:34 PM tuning, go!] Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809): Cello Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Hob. VIIb/1 (ca. 1761), featuring Peter Wyrick 01. [8:36 PM] Moderato 02. [8:46 PM] Adagio 03. [8:55 PM] Allegro molto [set ends 9:02 PM] ## Set Two ### Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 2 [9:21 PM lights down, tuning] Johannes Brahms (1833-1897): Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73 (1877) 01. [9:24 PM] Allegro non troppo (D major) 02. [9:45 PM] Adagio non troppo (B major) 03. [9:56 PM] Allegretto grazioso (quasi andantino) (G major) 04. [10:02 PM] Allegro con spirito (D major) [show ends 10:12 PM] ## Performers ### [Berkeley Symphony Orchestra](http://www.berkeleysymphony.org/) * Joana Carneiro: conductor; * Peter Wyrick: cello; * Members of the BSO TBD. ## Notes Dean's piece was good and weird. As it began, with sampled chorus, I wondered how hard it would be to substitute live performers... more expensive, but probably more interesting, especially if the chorus was split or moved about to introduce spatial effects. I enjoyed the weird contribution from the strings -- lots of skittering and scratching -- but I never really got the sense that it was a work for an agregation of soloists -- perhaps the individual lines were not strong enough to grab my ear? In any case, it was fun, and I wouldn't mind hearing it again sometime. The following Haydn concerto was certainly quite a different beast, and while it was both elegant and well-performed, I don't really have that much to say about it. Having only been rescued from long storage in an east European library, I agree that this work deserves attention as a "new" classic! Following intermission, JC aand co served up Brahms' Symphony #2. I've been trying to keep an open mind (and ears) regarding his works, what I heard tonight did not do much to sway my opinion. I think the BSO performed pretty admirably, but as with past gigs, I thout the performance suffered a bit during the busier sections -- a lack of crispness in timing and delivery giving the work a bit of loud, mushy tone rather than rousing brilliance. Oh well, I'm sure that it's hard work getting things exactly perfect, and with a constraint on paying for practice time, well, I guess I should just feel happy with what I get! BSO promo video on [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ez8iARQSzSc|Youtube]] {{tag>music Berkeley_Symphony_Orchestra Zellerbach_Hall_Auditorium Joana_Carneiro Peter_Wyrick}} [[2013#December_events|Back to the calendar!]]