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Salzburg Festival Reflections of the 2020 Season

August 22, 2020 - Celebrating 100 Years of the Salzburg Festival
Photo credit: Gerald Lehner
"Where the will is awakened, action has almost been accomplished." - Hugo von Hofmannsthal

by Dorothée Volpini, SFS Board Member

Dorothée Volpini de Maestri has been a Salzburg Festival Society Board Member since 2014. She is a Member of the Executive Committee and Secretary of the organization. Dorothée loves Salzburg, where she has her primary residence, living between New York, Florence and Salzburg. During this time when so many American and international guests are unable to travel to Salzburg, she wanted to share some of the daily views, that everyone enjoys when in this beautiful town. The city awaits you in 2021, as the Festival will continue celebrating its centenary!

The Salzburg Festival look of 2020 and ending of the final concert
The Berlin Philharmonic under Petrenko: a strong combination with Beethoven’s 3rd Piano Concerto ( with an unforgettable Trifonov), followed by Mendelssohn’s Symphonie Nr. 1. Where else can you hear one day the Vienna Philharmonic and the next day the Berlin Philharmonic
Ready for the final performance
One day to go ...
First part of the concert was Franz Liszt Concerto for piano and orchestra Nr. 1 Es-Dur S 124 with the outstanding pianist Evgeny Kissin. Kissin came to Salzburg for the first time as a 15 year old to audition for Herbert von Karajan. In 1988 he played for the first time at the Salzburg Festival.
Welcoming new SFS members to the Salzburg Festival and to a true Austrian lunch party after the Matinée
Today’s Matinée: Vienna Philharmonics with Gustavo Dudamel playing Igor Strawinsky’s L’Oiseau de feu. An incredible music played by an incredible orchestra and conductor.
With the Next Generation
Cecilia Bartoli in Concert

The last days of the Festival’s Jubilaeum Year are coming to an end.

Today, Wednesday, August 26th, was the last performance of Jedermann, which ended at 7 PM. Within minutes after the departure of the audience from the Domplatz, the dismantling crew arrived and is taking down, as it seems with it 100 years of Jedermann’s history.

Images of Salzburg at dusk
Anna Netrebko in concert with husband with husband and tenor Yusif Eyvazov
Siemens Fest of the Salzburg Festival - Performances for Everyone
The Magical Untersberg
Happy 100th Anniversary Salzburg Festival, August 22, 2020

Today, August 22nd, we are celebrating with Jedermann, 100 years of the Salzburg Festival. Even though the weather was superb these last days, today it will change and a storm front will keep us tonight in the Grosse Festspielhaus, instead on the Domplatz. The Festival always has a backup plan and keeps the show going!

100th Anniversary performance of Jedermann

Last Saturday’s Centennial talk, via video recording, the cellist and Auschwitz survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch spoke about her experience and survival through music in the concentration camp. She lives since 1946 in London. She was supposed to be the speaker at the opening ceremony of the Festival for 2020. Her speech remained a vital part of the 100th Anniversary message, even during this modified festival season. As she is 95 she was not advised to travel, therefore, she gave a video message. Her speech was followed by a performance by the cellist Julia Hagen.

Cellist Julia Hagen, playing for Centennial talk with Anita Lasker-Wallfisch
28 commemorative stones laid for victims of the Nazi dictatorship. Photo credit: SF/Lukas Pilz
The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra
Daniel Barenboim in 1950
Daniel Barenboim, Celebrating 70 years on Stage
Welcoming New SFS Members
Concert of Sonya Yoncheva
SFS Members at the Sacher Terrace

Everything is different for this anniversary festival. In the audience, with the artists and last but not least, on the stage: when 50 concerts take place during the summer festival. The focus is on solo piano evenings, when orchestras are on stage, there are a few other special features in addition to the program being limited to two hour performances. The distance between the musicians on stage is among them.

It gets more complicated when a choir is on stage, for example with Beethoven's Ninth, which will be performed on August 14 under Riccardo Muti with the Vienna Philharmonic and the Concert Association of the Vienna State Opera Choir: there will be a safety plexiglass wall between the choir and orchestra. A safety distance of one meter is provided as the distance between the musicians.

“We have the strange situation that in the morning the Philharmonic under Gustavo Dudamel play at a distance of one meter and in the evening the Berliner Philharmoniker come with Kirill Petrenko and have to sit at a distance of one and a half meters. " - Florian Wiegand
Photos of Salzburg and the Hotel Sacher, also see the depiction of the old bridge and surroundings of the 19th century, ‘Pferdeschwämme also hangs at Sacher's, probably 19th century. Both hang at the Sacher Grill.

Placido Domingo Receives Special Award

In Salzburg under strict security precautions, the Austrian Music Theater Prize was awarded on Thursday evening at the Salzburg Airport. The Spanish opera singer Placido Domingo was also honored for his life's work. He had traveled for the first time since contracting coronavirus. Domingo received a standing ovation for an emotional acceptance speech. The prize fills him with pride and gratitude.

“The months of lockdown showed us our fragility." - Placido Domingo

Salzburg is certainly a different place this summer. Due to half the size only allowed into the Festival halls and no intermissions, the social gathering is really only possible before or after a performance. But even that is kept to small groups only, as people rightfully remain careful.

Everyone is very respectful of the safety measurements around the Festspielhaus, and due to the wearing of masks and distance from others while seated, there is not much talking possible.

There are fewer ‘Zaungäste’ watching everyone arriving at the Hofstallgasse (must all keep distances from one another) before the performances and the frenzy TV and newspaper reporters have little to report in the social columns due to a lack of celebrity visitors.

The town has been very busy during these past days because of the rainy weather, which brought all the tourists from the lakes and nearby mountain resorts for a day visit to the Mozartstadt. But this will calm down a lot from now on as there is only sun in the forecast, starting tomorrow.

Premiere of Cosi fan tutte, August 2
Premiere of Elektra, August 1 and Social Distancing at the Goldener Hirsch
Speech about the Century in the Felsenreitschule
From the beginning, the Salzburg Festival had an extraordinary mission: to create meaning in times of crisis. Four lectures about the century lead us towards the Salzburg Festival’s centenary, exploring the question whether the belief in the power of the arts – of which our founding fathers were convinced – still endows the Festival with meaning in our changed times. They invoke the world of yesterday, today and tomorrow.

Life came back slowly but steadily. Austrians discovered Salzburg and were the first ‘tourists’. Then by mid-June the borders re-opened and Continental Europe visited our beautiful Festival town. The streets began to feel crowded again....

A City Coming Back to Life, June 2020

Everyone who knows Salzburg, knows the crowded streets and squares. This early spring we were able to experience something totally different, something so magical (if the cause of it were not so severe...): streets emptied of people and cars, total silence due to no air traffic and ducks taking over the Furtwängler Park. The beautiful buildings in the old part of town took such a presence and prominence that they became the only players in town.

Salzburg, A City Gone Silent, April/May 2020

Credits:

Salzburg Festival  Dorothée Volpini