Mahler V - iv
DESCRIPTION

The slow movement (the Adagietto) of Mahler's Symphony No. 5, composed in 1901-1902, is one of the most famous and popular movements in the classical music repertoire. Mahler's rich and deeply poignant counterbalance between the string section of the orchestra and a solo harp is drawn out by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra's young Russian conductor Vasily Petrenko, who described this section of music in rehearsals as a very romantic love song.

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CREDITS
DURATION:
00:11:31

Curator:
Vasily Petrenko (Chief Conductor RLPO)

Directors:
Tony Bulley (multi-camera)
Don Boyd

Producer:
Don Boyd

Cameras:
Jon Brady
Kris Macdonald
Eugene Wong
Hambi Haralambous
Don Boyd

Editors:
Daniel McGuire (Mahler Concerts and interviews)
Marnie Hollande (Mahler Rehearsals)

Sound Mixers:
Liam Abel
Greg Holt

Production Manager:
Jackie Mackinney

Leader of the Orchestra:
James Clark

Chairman Liverpool Philharmonic Hall:
Dr Anthony Harvey 

Management RLPO:
Andrew Cornall (Artistic Director/Music Producer)
Michael Eakin (CEO)

Marketing, Communications and Media RLPO:
Millicent Jones
Stuart Almond

Data Wranglers:
Matt Blakeley
Greg Holt

Runners:
Carolyn Jackson
Alice Spence

DESCRIPTION
The slow movement (the Adagietto) of Mahler's Symphony No. 5, composed in 1901-1902, is one of the most famous and popular movements in the classical music repertoire. Mahler's rich and deeply poignant counterbalance between the string section of the orchestra and a solo harp is drawn out by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra's young Russian conductor Vasily Petrenko, who described this section of music in rehearsals as a very romantic love song.
HiBROW's production teams, which included the legendary British film director Ken Russell, captured the entire rehearsal process and performances by the RLPO of arguably Mahler's two greatest symphonies - the Fourth and the Fifth.
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