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Wednesday, February 26, 2003
Christoph Eschenbach announces his inaugural
season
Long awaited concerto gets Orchestra premiere
2003 Absolutely Mozart Festival announced
A view of Sawallisch, a window on Schumann
Philadelphia lures Morales from Met
Four young winners named in Orchestra's
Student Competition
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Christoph
Eschenbach announces his inaugural season
Embarking on what he characterized as a "spiritual journey"
and "voyage of discovery," Christoph Eschenbach
marked a new beginning in The Philadelphia Orchestra's esteemed
103-year history with his announcement on Tuesday of the 2003-04
concert season. Before an audience of journalists, subscribers,
Board members, and friends, Mr. Eschenbach introduced the
upcoming season and outlined an artistic vision founded on
his spirit of innovation, creative energy, and passion for
all arts. Mr. Eschenbach's inaugural season as music director
strikes a dynamic balance between traditional Classical- and
Romantic-period orchestral repertoire and significant works
from the 20th and 21st centuries, including important Philadelphia
Orchestra firsts. A highlight of Mr. Eschenbach's own 12 weeks
of subscription programs will be a month-long Mahler Festival
entitled "Mahler's World," which introduces The
Philadelphia Orchestra's first-ever, multi-season Mahler cycle.
The new season also focuses on composer Olivier Messiaen through
performances of four of his major orchestral works, two of
which will be first hearings for Philadelphia Orchestra audiences.
The announcement took place in the Orchestra's home, Verizon
Hall, at The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. Subscription
ticket packages for the 2003-04 season are now on sale. For
more information please visit www.philorch.org
or call Ticket Philadelphia at 215.893.1955.
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Christoph Eschenbach. Photo by Candace
diCarlo. |
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Long
awaited concerto gets Orchestra premiere
The Orchestra's concerts this week feature a new work by Oliver
Knussen, his Violin Concerto, with soloist Pinchas Zukerman,
the Concerto's dedicatee. The new work is the outcome of a
longstanding friendship between the composer and violinist.
More than 20 years ago, when the two were introduced in New
York, Zukerman - already an admirer of Knussen's work - asked
the composer to write a piece for him. The idea for the work
persisted, but it took many years - and a joint commission
from The Philadelphia Orchestra and Pittsburgh Symphony -
for the Concerto to come to fruition. The Pittsburgh Symphony
premiered the Concerto on April 5, 2002, under Knussen's baton.
Christoph Eschenbach will conduct the performances with The
Philadelphia Orchestra, but not without Knussen's guidance
- the composer is in town for the week to attend the performances
and present PreConcert Conversations, among other speaking
engagements. "[The Concerto] is just the sort of music
a violinist would want to play," commented Andrew Druckenbrod,
classical music critic at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
The Concerto will be performed at concerts at Verizon Hall,
February 27 through March 1, and Carnegie Hall, March 4. Composer
Oliver Knussen will participate in PreConcert conversations
one hour before each concert in Philadelphia.
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Oliver Knussen |
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2003
Absolutely Mozart Festival announced
The Philadelphia Orchestra's second Absolutely Mozart Festival,
June 26 through July 2, 2003, celebrates music long distinguished
by its elegance, beauty, and enduring ability to touch listeners.
With three programs over six concerts, the Festival offers
an opportunity to hear The Philadelphia Orchestra perform
exclusively music from the Classical period. Following the
success of the Orchestra's first Absolutely Mozart Festival
in 2002, the number of performances this year has been doubled.
Pianist Emanuel Ax, one of the most admired and loved musicians
in the world, serves as guest artistic director and appears
as piano soloist on all three programs. Peter Oundjian returns
as guest conductor after his hugely successful debut in last
year's Festival, with featured soloists soprano Christine
Brandes and pianist Shai Wosner. For more information please
visit www.philorch.org or call Ticket
Philadelphia at 215.893.1955.
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Emanuel Ax |
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A
view of Sawallisch, a window on Schumann
Following a recent Orchestra performance of Schumann's Third
Symphony at Carnegie Hall, Bernard Holland of the New York
Times noted that Mr. Sawallisch's unassuming personality
has made him a conductor who is sometimes dismissed in The
Philadelphia Orchestra's "star-heavy history." Holland
continued, "I think, on the other hand that he is one
of the best things ever to happen to [The Philadelphia Orchestra].
With a crook of his finger and a nod of the head, he brings
music directly to us. Listeners forget he is there, which
is perhaps the greatest compliment that could be paid."
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Wolfgang Sawallisch. Photo by Kelly
& Massa |
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Philadelphia
lures Morales from Met
Ricardo Morales, principal clarinet of the Metropolitan Opera
Orchestra, will join The Philadelphia Orchestra on June 23,
2003, as the newly appointed principal clarinet. (Audiences
will hear him at the Absolutely Mozart concert on June 26.)
The appointment follows a yearlong search, and marks Wolfgang
Sawallisch's last appointment to the Orchestra's ranks. Born
in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Mr. Morales became principal clarinet
of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra in 1993 at age 21. New
York Times critic Anthony Tommasini recently gave Mr. Morales
one of the rarest forms of praise when he set aside space in
his review of the Met's much anticipated, star-heavy production
of Berlioz's Les Troyens to mention Morales's "exquisite
playing," noting that he "deserved a place onstage
during curtain calls."
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Four
young winners named in Orchestra's Student Competition
Four young musicians, ranging in age from 11 to 20, have been
named winners in The Philadelphia Orchestra's annual Albert
M. Greenfield Student Competition. They are Robyn Bollinger
(violin, age 11), Hannah Choi (violin, 15), and percussionists
Pius Cheung, 20, and James Michael Deitz, 19, who shared a prize
with their performance of works for two marimbas. The young
artists will appear as soloists at special concerts with the
Orchestra during the 2003-04 season and will receive monetary
awards. Final judging was held in Verizon Hall at The Kimmel
Center for the Performing Arts, on Tuesday, February 4. Seventeen
young musicians performed during the final round of the Competition
before an audience of invited guests.
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Copyright 2001-2003 The Philadelphia
Orchestra
web@philorch.org
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