Boston bass retires with nod to Koussevitzky

Boston bass retires with nod to Koussevitzky

Orchestras

norman lebrecht

July 24, 2024

Principal double-bass Edwin Barker will leave the Boston Symphony Orchestra at the end of the season after 48 years in the seat.

His parting Tanglewood performance will be Serge Koussevitzky’s Double Bass Concerto this Friday. Koussevitzky, Boston’s formative conductor, started life in Russia as a double-bass virtuoso who married the daughter of a tea magnate (which must have gone down well in Boston).

Comments

  • nimitta says:

    A great player and colleague – he’ll be missed!

  • Tricky Sam says:

    We graduated the New England Conservatory together. A wonderful career!

  • Costa Pilavachi says:

    A leader, a gentleman and a great musician.

  • Gregory Walz says:

    The Utah Symphony performed Koussevitzky’s Double Bass Concerto with long-time principal (since 1988) David Yavornitzky last week, Wednesday, July 17, 2024, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church just outside downtown Park City, Utah, as part of the orchestra’s annual summer Deer Valley Music Festival.

    The piece was performed in a new edition, and the work is a breezily Romantic one. Balances can be a problem, and I suspect that the piece works better in a smaller, more intimate acoustic environment like St. Mary’s Church.

  • Sam says:

    Holy cow. Legends are mortals? So curious as to what he’ll be up to wit the next stage of his life. Thank you for the tremendous private lessons, Mr. Barker.

  • Lincoln Russell says:

    A really great guy, a true gentleman and a superb musician, Ed has long been a pillar of strength and integrity of this great orchestra.

  • Fronk says:

    Ah ‘ you ‘ talk of Voices…the 4 Koussavitski brothers and the better knowledge Moses K…possessed a lyrics tenor’s voice
    When listened without Kleenex handy…drenched one’s clothes

    Listen to his own composition of
    “Hamikdash” … report in to tell me I’m wrong…and not $ in sight…sung basically for bed & Breakfast by today’s standard…then listen to the greatest tenor Kwartin died in
    WARSAW 1944.

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