Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment / Sir Simon Rattle

St John Passion

This event has already taken place! 15 | 52 | 118 | 164 | 190
This event has already taken place! 15 | 52 | 118 | 164 | 190

In his two epochal settings of the Passion – according to St Matthew and to St John – Johann Sebastian Bach distilled the essence of his church music and his theological message. However the right performance context has always been a subject of debate: both works go beyond the scope of any liturgical use, and the structure in each case with recitatives, arias, dialogues and choruses calls clearly for scenic realisation. Thus American star producer Peter Sellars and Sir Simon Rattle collaborated to perform the St Matthew Passion on the stage of Berlin’s Philharmonie in 2010, and the St John Passion followed four years later. Sellars’s approach is based on his conviction that »This is not theatre. It’s a prayer, a meditation.«

Please note: Mezzo-soprano Christine Rice steps in for Magdalena Kožená. Christian Gerhaher has also been forced to cancel his appearance as Petrus and Pilatus in the St John Passion due to health reasons. Austrian baritone Georg Nigl kindly steps in to sing both roles at short notice.

Deutschlandfunk called it an »interdenominational religious celebration«; the Berliner Zeitung experienced a »spiritual rapture that seizes the whole room, a kind of shared experience of awakening arising from the feeling of having all been witnesses to an unprecedented event«.

This production of St John Passion now comes to the Elbphilharmonie with the same acclaimed vocal ensemble and the period ensemble Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment.

Performers

Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment

Choir of the Age of Enlightenment

Camilla Tilling soprano

Christine Rice mezzo-soprano

Andrew Staples tenor

Mark Padmore tenor

Georg Nigl baritone

Roderick Williams baritone

conductor Sir Simon Rattle

stage direction Peter Sellars

Programme

Johann Sebastian Bach
Johannes-Passion BWV 245

Series

Visiting Orchestras

Music Theatre

Festival

Portrait Sir Simon Rattle