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Top 6 Orchestra Flashmobs — Acts of Robust Hit-and-Run Culture in Public Spaces

There’s one thing about classical music that I’ve always believed: it is far better to see it performed than to hear a recording of it. While this is true for just about all kinds of music, the multi-layered nature of classical compositions (especially pieces that call for large orchestras) make it even more suited than normal for in-person performance.

And when those performances take place in public, the experience is all the more radical. Breaking out of the confines of concert halls with perfect acoustics and controlled environments into the chaos that is a flashmob, these are six of my favorite classical performances from all over the world.

Ode to Joy in Catalonia

One hundred people from the Vallès Symphony Orchestra, the Lieder, Amics de l’Òpera and Coral Belles Arts choirs came together in a square in Catalonia, Spain, to perform Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. The whole thing was beautifully filmed and as flashmobs go, ranks up there with the best of them.

Peer Gynt on a Metro

The Coopenhagen Philharmonic surprised metro passengers with a performance of Edvard Grieg’s Peer Gynt in a fairly crowded compartment. The looks of sheer pleasure on many of the passengers’ faces is just as entrancing as the music.

The CPHPHIL strikes again

The Coopenhagen Philharmonic apparently likes this sort of “art in the public sphere thing. Here they are again, with a performance of Ravel’s Bolero.

Tchaikovsky and Vivaldi in Indy

Lest you think all good things only happen in Europe, we present a string company from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, rendering a masterful performance of pieces from Tchaikovsky and Vivaldo in the Keystone Fashion Mall in Indianapolis. Classical music in the midwest? For. The. Win.

The Canadians Handel Business Too

North of the border, our Canadian cousins got a nice surprise when a bunch of vocalists jumped up in a mall food court and belted out Handel’s Hallelujah chorus.

… and back to Europe

Those Europeans may not have all the classical flashmobs, but they seem to have some of the best. We close this list in Vienna, Austria, where Solistinnen, Chor und Orchester der Volksoper Wien renders an absolute stunner performance at the Westbahnhof Wien. Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana has been performed often before, but I doubt those performances had dancers who went undercover as janitors or rail officials.

Do you have a favorite performance you’d like to tell us about? Sound off in the comments, let us know!

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41 replies on:
Top 6 Orchestra Flashmobs — Acts of Robust Hit-and-Run Culture in Public Spaces

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  1. Marian Majik says:
    January 9, 2013 at 11:08 am

    Great performances – thank you all !

  2. Glen says:
    January 9, 2013 at 7:54 am

    Chase, these are wonderful. I love seeing the reaction of little kids “conducting”.
    My favorite for the Hallelujah Chorus has to be the one the Opera Company did at Macy’s in Philly at one of their Random Acts of Culture. Just because they have a 4 rank organ IN THE STORE!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wp_RHnQ-jgU

  3. Dawn Camp says:
    January 9, 2013 at 6:34 am

    Thank you! I teach a group of homeschooled high school students one day a week and yesterday we switched from art to music history. I’m sending them here to see this, hoping it will enliven Classical music for them.

  4. Jimmy says:
    January 9, 2013 at 12:05 am

    I always enjoy these flasmobs

    I found another (not classical ) but a symphonic touch

    http://youtu.be/8UX14H3oo2E

    J

  5. jessica says:
    January 8, 2013 at 9:53 pm

    what a wonderful reminder of the joy and creativity still present within the human spirit. thank you for posting this.

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