Musicians give free online concerts to beat coronavirus
BERLIN 鈥 Bans on mass gatherings introduced to slow the spread of the coronavirus pandemic might have been expected to deal a death blow to musical life, but have instead prompted a boom in free online concerts.
One musician to step up to the plate is Russian-German pianist Igor Levit, who took to Twitter on Thursday evening to stream an impromptu rendition of Beethoven鈥檚 Waldstein Sonata Op. 53 from his Berlin flat to entertain audiences penned at home by the virus.
Across Europe and the world, authorities are shuttering schools, museums, bars, and concert halls in an effort to prevent the kind of close physical contact that fosters the transmission of a virus that has killed more than 4,000 people worldwide.
Germany has so far reported 2,369 confirmed coronavirus cases and five deaths. Berlin, among other German cities and regions, has announced plans to gradually close schools and reduce public transport over the coming week.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a sad time, it鈥檚 a weird time, but acting is better than doing nothing,鈥 Levit told viewers of his stream, before sitting down at his Steinway to trill the piece鈥檚 swooping opening bars.
鈥淟et鈥檚 bring the house concert into the 21st 肠别苍迟耻谤测!鈥
Across Germany, opera houses and concert halls had the same idea. Berlin鈥檚 Staatsoper, rather than calling off a performance of George Bizet鈥檚 Carmen, opted to stream the story of the bewitching gypsy girl online for audiences worldwide.
Moments after that ended, the baton passed across town to conductor Simon Rattle who led the Berlin Philarmonic in a performance of Luciano Berio鈥檚 Sinfonia and Bela Bartok鈥檚 Concerto for Orchestra.
鈥淭he Philharmonie Berlin will be closed until 19 April 鈥 as a measure to counteract the spread of the coronavirus,鈥 the orchestra said on its streaming platform, adding that it had decided to give the concert anyway, 鈥渨ithout an audience鈥.
Nor was the generosity confined to the high-brow: earlier last week English crooner James Blunt鈥檚 concert in Hamburg鈥檚 empty Elbphilarmonie also took place before an invisible audience of millions.
After Levit鈥檚 25-minute concert was retweeted 1,500 times and garnered almost 6,000 likes, the pianist seemed to have acquired a taste for the new genre.
鈥淥verwhelmed. Thank you. See you tomorrow, same time. 7 p.m. CET,鈥 Levit tweeted. 鈥 Reuters


