Berliner Philharmoniker

History and music of a world orchestra

By Berliner Philharmoniker

Berliner Philharmoniker

Orchestra photograph 2015 (2015) by Monika RittershausBerliner Philharmoniker

A world-class orchestra

Passionate musicians, charismatic conductors, outstanding soloists - since 1882

The oldest remaining photo, ABPh, 1888, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

It started with an act of rebellion: in March 1882 50 members of the ensemble run by the popular musical director Benjamin Bilse refused to sign their new contracts – they found the working conditions too unfavourable: they were to earn hardly more than day labourers. The musicians decided to set up on their own and from then on to work at their own risk. Read more

Hans von Bülow (2015) by ABPhBerliner Philharmoniker

Hans von Bülow

Principal Conductor from 1887 to 1892. In his day Hans von Bülow embodied the modern type of conductor: eccentric in his gestures, uncompromising, analytical in his musical work, expressive in his musical results. He was an orchestral educator to the highest degree an established standards that formed the basis for the orchestra’s later international fame.

Arthur Nikisch (2015) by ABPhBerliner Philharmoniker

Arthur Nikisch

Principal Conductor from 1895 bis 1922. Arthur Nikisch, who conducted with quiet and sparing gestures, banked on romantic, sensual colouring and a rhapsodic breadth which felt improvised. He shifted the programmatic emphasis, not only launching German repertoire, but also conducting compositions by Tchaikovsky, Berlioz, Liszt, Strauss, Mahler – and particularly Bruckner. Under his direction the orchestra became increasingly prominent on the international scene; any and all soloists of distinction came to Berlin to perform with the Philharmoniker. But that was not all. Nikisch took many trips with the orchestra and in this way enhanced their international reputation.

Wilhelm Furtwängler (2015) by ABPhBerliner Philharmoniker

Wilhelm Furtwängler

Principal Conductor from 1922 to 1934 and from 1952 to 1954. Wilhelm Furtwängler was a musical personality who built on the accomplishments of his predecessors Hans von Bülow and Nikisch and helped the orchestra continue to expand its renown. His unconventional conducting technique was fabled: it required great personal responsibility and sensitivity from the musicians. Furtwängler formed the Berliner Philharmoniker into his very own instrument, one that ingeniously realized his interpretation ideas.

Herbert von Karajan (2015) by S.LauterwasserBerliner Philharmoniker

Herbert von Karajan

Principal Conductor from 1956 to 1989. Under Herbert von Karajan the Berliner Philharmoniker developed their very own performance culture, characterised by a beauty of sound, enchanting legati, virtuosity and perfection. He preferred to concentrate on the classical-romantic repertoire: Beethoven, Brahms, Bruckner, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Wagner and Strauss. In addition, he devoted himself to the Second Viennese School and leading composers of the early 20th century. With Karajan the Philharmonic moved in 1963 into the Philharmonie built by Scharoun. With him the orchestra became a media star. And it has this conductor to thank for two further institutions: the Salzburg Easter Festival, which Karajan created in 1967, and the Orchestra Academy.

Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, DCH, 1972, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Based on a live concert performance given before an invited audience in the Berlin Philharmonie, this 1972 film of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony shows the orchestra marrying a depth of tone Nikisch and Furtwängler would have recognised with a new-found brilliance of attack which Karajan’s Toscanini-inspired Beethoven readings had brought to the Berlin tradition.

Herbert von Karajan in the Digital Concert Hall

Tchaikovsky, Symphony No. 6, DCH, 1973, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Herbert von Karajan dirigiert Tschaikowskys Sechste Symphonie (1973). Die Tschaikowsky-Tradition der Berliner Philharmoniker reicht zurück bis in die Anfangszeit des Orchesters. Der Komponist kannte und schätzte die beiden ersten Chefdirigenten der Berliner, Hans von Bülow und Artur Nikisch, und ihre Lesart von Tschaikowskys Werken – vor allem der drei letzten Symphonien – fand eine ebenso engagierte und charismatische Fortsetzung durch Wilhelm Furtwängler und Herbert von Karajan.

Claudio Abbado (2015) by C.GrothBerliner Philharmoniker

Claudio Abbado

Principal Conductor from 1990 to 2002. Claudio Abbado strived for a more transparent orchestral sound than his predecessor. The principal conductor placed his very own emphasis with his concert programmes. Typical of the Abbado era were major concert cycles focussing on a specific theme, for instance Prometheus, Faust or Shakespeare, and the engagement with the work of Gustav Mahler.

Stravinsky, “The Firebird ”, DCH, 1994, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

There is nowhere else in the world that the Berliner Philharmoniker have been received with more warmth, enthusiasm, and for so many years, than in Japan. Recorded in the Suntory Hall in Tokyo in 1994, this concert with Claudio Abbado gives an impression of just the kind of reception they are given. The programme includes Igor Stravinsky’s “The Firebird” Suite.

Claudio Abbado in the Digital Concert Hall

Dvorak, Symphony No. 9, DCH, 2002, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Mit dem Europakonzert des Jahres 2002 im Teatro Massimo von Palermo begann Abbados letzte Tournee an der Spitze des Orchesters. Sie führte quer durch seine italienische Heimat bis nach Wien, wo Abbado - mit Nachfolger Sir Simon Rattle im Publikum - am 13. Mai 2002 ein letztes Mal als Chefdirigent mit den Berliner Philharmonikern konzertierte. Er dirigierte u. a. Antonín Dvořáks Symphonie Nr. 9 »Aus der neuen Welt«.

Sir Simon Rattle (2015) by Monika RittershausBerliner Philharmoniker

Sir Simon Rattle

Principal conductor since 2002. He favours an even more transparent orchestra sound, confronts the musicians with conductors who are considered specialists in historical performance practice, and focuses more strongly on the works of Viennese classicism as well as contemporary composers. And that’s not all. Quite in line with the intention to get classical music out of its elitist enclave and to identify new pathways to music for the audience, Rattle established the Berlin Philharmonic’s Education Programme. With this the orchestra wants to reach people who thus far have had little or no access to classical music, particularly children and young people.

Brahms, Piano Concert No. 1 with Barenboim, DCH, 2004, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Seit 1991 gastieren die Berliner Philharmoniker jedes Jahr am 1. Mai an einem europäischen Ort von besonderer (kultur-)historischer Bedeutung, um an ihre Gründung am 1. Mai 1882 zu erinnern und ein Zeichen zu setzen für das gemeinsame Erbe der Alten Welt. Im Olympiajahr 2004 fiel die Wahl auf Athen, die Wiege der abendländischen Kultur und Demokratie. Das war das erste gemeinsame Konzert von Sir Simon Rattle und Daniel Barenboim überhaupt mit Brahms' Erstem Klavierkonzert.

Lincke, “Berliner Luft”, DCH, 2005, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Waldbühne 2005: the very last encore – Paul Linke’s "Berlin Air”, in which the orchestra’s principal conductor as usual played the bass drum.

Bach, St Matthew Passion, DCH, 2011, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

The critics’ reviews of St Matthew Passion in the Philharmonie were full of superlatives. The radio station RBB Kultur considered it to be “a moment of glory for Rattle! And one of the best evenings with the Philharmoniker for years.« Media praise didn’t stop at the Berliner Philharmoniker and their principal conductor but extended to what is called the “ritualization” by American star director Peter Sellars.

Late Night with Barbara Hannigan, DCH, 2012, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

What a programme Sir Simon Rattle, soprano Barbara Hannigan and members of the Berliner Philharmoniker have assembled for this Late Night: naughty, sophisticated, sexy and subversive – in the spirit of Stravinsky and Weill, but also very British: William Walton’s 1923 “entertainment” Façade,

Schumann, Symphony No. 1, DCH, 2013, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Für Simon Rattle ist Robert Schumann »the echt Romantic«. Und in der Tat: Das Überschäumende dieser Epoche, ihre Leidenschaft ebenso wie ihre Melancholie lässt sich bis heute in Schumanns Musik nacherleben. Für die Berliner Philharmoniker gehören Schumanns Symphonien zum Kernrepertoire. Und so ist es nur naheliegend, dass die Berliner Philharmoniker ihr Label Berliner Philharmoniker Recordings 2014 mit den vier Schumann-Symphonien eröffnen. Hier ein Auschnitt aus der Ersten Symphonie.

Beethoven, Symphony No. 9, DCH, 2014, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

On occasion of the 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 2014 the orchestra played Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, which with its utopian content of unity, joy and fraternity optimally corresponded to subsequent generations’ artistic religious ideas.

Puccini, “ManonLescaut”, DCH, 2014, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

“Manon Lescaut” at the 2014 Easter Festival: From naive innocence to femme fatale and outlaw – the fall from grace of the heroine of Abbé Prévost novel “L’Histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut” is extreme. With the dramma lirico “Manon Lescaut“, the 35-year-old Giacomo Puccini made his artistic breakthrough in 1893.

Beethoven Cycle 2015, DCH, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

A highlight of the 2015/2016 season: the Beethoven cycle with the Berliner Philharmoniker under the baton of Sir Simon Rattle. Here is an excerpt from the "Eroica". The complete cycle can be found in the Digital Concert Hall.

To the Digital Concert Hall

Berliner Philharmoniker (2015) by HöderathBerliner Philharmoniker

Berliner Philharmoniker and guests

Watch and listen to classical music's finest conductors and soloists performing with the Berliner Philharmoniker – live as it happens or on-demand as it suits you.

Mehta – Mahler, Symphonie No. 5, DCH, 2008, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

The natural philosophers of the 19th century would have adored this work. As overwhelming as Gustav Mahler’s Third Symphony is in its dimensions, as astounding it is in expressing the primordial experience of nature, which this piece focuses on. Zubin Mehta stands on the Philharmoniker’s rostrum, a conductor with one of the longest affiliations with the orchestra.

Ozawa – Bruckner, Symphony No. 1, DCH, 2009, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Anton Bruckner called his First Symphony a "saucy maid" and it is probably true to say that there is more exuberant joie de vivre to be found in this than in any other of the composer's works. It is hard to believe that, previous to this performance with Seiji Ozawa, the Berliner Philharmoniker had not included this highly original symphony in a concert for a quarter of a century.

Dudamel – Strauss: “Also sprach Zarathustra”, DCH, 2012, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Gustavo Dudamel holds a prominent position among musicians of our time – as a conductor who stands out not by an otherworldly authority over others but by an absolute devotion to the music and a unique ability to inspire orchestras and audiences with his energy. In this concert he demonstrates his qualities in, among other works, Richard Strauss’s “Also sprach Zarathustra”.

Petrenko – Scriabin, “Le Poème de l'extase”, DCH, 2012, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Die Überraschung war perfekt: Am 21. Juni 2015 wählten die Berliner Philharmoniker mit großer Mehrheit Kirill Petrenko zum designierten neuen Chefdirigenten der Berliner Philharmoniker und Künstlerischen Leiter der Stiftung Berliner Philharmoniker. Der Russe stand 2006 erstmals am Pult des Orchesters. Hier dirigiert er Alexander Skrjabins »Le Poème de l’extase«. Ein Orchesterwerk, dessen orgiastischer Klangrausch typisch für viele Kompositionen der Spätromantik ist.

Nelsons – Wagner, “Tannhäuser” Ouverture, DCH, 2013, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Andris Nelsons, which was in 2008 the 30-year-old (indirect) successor to Sir Simon Rattle at the helm of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, first conducted the Berliner Philharmoniker in October 2010. Here he conducts the "Tannhäuser” prelude by Richard Wagner.

Blomstedt – Berlioz, "Symphonie fantastique”, DCH, 2014, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Herbert Blomstedt has regularly given guest performances with the Berliner Philharmoniker, often as a major advocate of Bruckner symphonies. For his February concerts 2014 at the Philharmonie, the maestro has included Hector Berlioz’s Symphonie fantastique in the programme

Gabetta – Elgar, Cello Concerto, DCH, 2014, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

The Easter Festival has always been an occasion for the Berliner Philharmoniker to work with young, aspiring soloists for the first time. This is also the case 2014 in Baden-Baden, where the Argentinian cellist Sol Gabetta makes her Philharmoniker debut with Edward Elgar’s Cello Concerto.

Argerich – Schumann, Piano Concerto, DCH, 2014, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Martha Argerich and Riccardo Chailly have been linked with the Berliner Philharmoniker by long artistic friendships. For them to perform at the orchestra’s concerts jointly, however, is something of a rarity. Only twice, namely in 1983 and 1989, did the Berlin audience have the opportunity to experience the two of them on stage. This time they have decided to take on Robert Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor.

Thielemann – Brahms, "Ein deutsches Requiem”, DCH, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

The list of conductors who have conducted Brahms’s “Deutsches Requiem” with the Berliner Philharmoniker since Herbert von Karajan’s death is remarkable: Carlo Maria Giulini, Claudio Abbado, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Bernard Haitink, Simon Rattle and lastly Donald Runnicles. In this recording Christian Thielemann conducts the masterpiece.

Haitink – Schubert, Symphony No. 5, DCH, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Bernard Haitink, a highly-esteemed guest conductor with the Berliner Philharmoniker for more than 50 years, conducted in Mai 2015 a work which he has never performed before with the orchestra: Franz Schubert’s Fifth Symphony in B flat major.

Zimerman – Brahms, Piano Concerto No. 1, DCH, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

A unwillingness to compromise means that the legendary pianist Krystian Zimerman agrees to the release of recordings only in exceptional cases. All the more fortunate that his interpretation of Johannes Brahms’s First Piano Concerto with the Berliner Philharmoniker and Sir Simon Rattle is available in the Digital Concert Hall.

Digital Concert Hall (2015) by DCHBerliner Philharmoniker

Digital Concert Hall

The virtual concert hall of the Berliner Philharmoniker

Browser, DCH, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

The internet platform presents over 40 live-streams every year in HD video, hundreds of exclusive concert recordings on-demand, historic concerts with Herbert von Karajan and Claudio Abbado, free exclusive interviews with the conductors and soloists, feature-length documentaries, incl. "Rhythm is it!" and "Trip to Asia" and free children's concerts for the whole family.
To the Digital Concert Hall

Camera 2, P.Adamik, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

Seven cameras are installed in the hall for the online broadcasts of the Berliner Philharmoniker in the Digital Concert Hall. The cameras are mounted on pan-tilt heads and controlled remotely from the video studio of the Philharmonie. Thanks to particularly sensitive lenses, they need no additional lighting to provide a high quality HD image.

Studio, P.Adamik, 2015, From the collection of: Berliner Philharmoniker
Show lessRead more

In 2008, the video technology was installed in this studio of the Philharmonie, originally designed for sound recordings. From here, directors and cameramen control seven HD cameras mounted in the hall for the online broadcast of the Berliner Philharmoniker in the Digital Concert Hall. In this way, around 40 concerts are streamed live each season and are also later available for viewing in the video archive of the Digital Concert Hall.

Credits: Story

Berliner Philharmoniker Foundation/PhilMedia

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Google apps