The Czech Philharmonic organized a benefit concert for hospitals in Prague and Brno to help doctors, nurses and other staff care for coronavirus patients. Via Foundation held a public charity collection. Donors sent in CZK 7.3 million ($285,980) in just one week.
The Czech Philharmonic teamed up with Czech TV and Česká spořitelna bank to conceive a benefit concert that could be performed even under the strictest safety recommendations. The “Helping hospitals with the Czech Philharmonic” concert featured unique renditions of some of the most famous Czech compositions: instead of the full orchestra, solo and chamber ensembles played to an otherwise empty concert hall. Smetana’s Moldau was performed as a harp solo by Jana Boušková. Violinists Josef Špaček, Jiří Vodička and Václav Petr were accompanied by pianists Martin Kasík, Miroslav Sekera and David Mareček and the finale presented the Lobkowicz trio, composed of violinist Jan Mráček, cellist Ivan Vokáč and pianist Lukáš Klánský. The program was comprised of works by Bedřich Smetana and Antonín Dvořák along with one work by Johann Sebastian Bach. Jiří Vejvoda moderated the concert.
Via Foundation organized a public charity collection which enabled donors to send gifts of any amount during the concert by electronic bank transfer, DMS or online at Darujme.cz. The proceeds were divided between five hospitals: the Motol University Hospital, the Na Bulovce Hospital, the Na Homolce Hospital, the Brno University Hospital and the St. Anna University Hospital in Brno. The hospitals will use the funds to buy protective suits, surgical gowns, gloves, disinfectants, PCR tests, cyclers, ventilators, suction pumps, ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation), vital function monitor modules, transport bio-bags, devices to disinfect enclosed areas, etc.
Strict hygienic restrictions were maintained during the concert rehearsals and performance to keep all of the participants safe. Everyone wore protective face masks (which meant that wind instruments had to be excluded), maintained recommended spacing and used separate doors to enter the stage. The piano was disinfected after each piece. Remotely controlled digital camers made it possible to live stream the concert.
You can enjoy the concert here. It was held in the Dvořák hall of the Rudolfinum in Prague on Saturday, March 28 at 8 p.m. and live streamed. The program concert is available here.
The concert was supported by Česká spořitelna, which gave the seed gift. All of the musicians performed on a voluntary basis.
Information here is based on Czech Philharmonic press release. Photos by Petr Kadlec and Tomáš Kudrna.