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The Philadelphia Orchestra opens 2004-05 season with Opening
Night Gala and live video presentation on Broad Street
Celebrated soprano Renée Fleming joins Music Director Christoph
Eschenbach and Orchestra for Opening Night Concert
Concert to be broadcast for public on Broad Street, outside the Kimmel
Center
(Philadelphia, September 3, 2004)
Philadelphians will have an opportunity to share in the excitement of
the opening of The Philadelphia Orchestra's 2004-05 season on Tuesday,
September 21, when a gala Opening Night Concert and simultaneous
broadcast for the public take place inside and outside The Kimmel Center
for the Performing Arts. Music Director Christoph Eschenbach conducts
the Orchestra in the Opening Night Concert, the first concert of the Orchestra's
105th season, joined by celebrated soprano Renée Fleming. The
concert begins at 8:30 p.m.
Gala festivities surrounding the concert, which are organized by the Orchestra's
Volunteer Committees, include pre-concert cocktails and dinner in the
Kimmel Center for gala sponsors, benefactors, patrons, and the Orchestra's
21st Century Society. In addition, all who are attending the concert are
invited to a champagne reception in the Kimmel Center preceding the concert.
The Opening Night program begins with Wagner's Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin,
features Renée Fleming singing Strauss's Four Last Songs,
and concludes with Dvorak's Eighth Symphony. For the second year the Orchestra's
Opening Night Concert will be broadcast on a giant video screen on Broad
Street across from the Kimmel Center. Enabling a wider public to share
in the concert experience continues a practice that Christoph Eschenbach
implemented at the start of his tenure last season as one facet of his
mission to "raise the invisible curtain" and bring the Orchestra
and audience closer to together.
Praised by critics as "the gold standard of soprano sound,"
American soprano Renée Fleming is recognized worldwide for
her musicianship, intelligence, and interpretive talents. A sought-after
performer on stage and recordings, the two-time Grammy Award winner is
a champion of new music, as well as the standard repertoire, having created
many roles for the operatic stage and premiered numerous songs written
for her. This November, Ms. Fleming's first book, The Inner Voice,
will be released. Also this fall, Decca releases her latest recording,
Renée Fleming: Handel, a collection of arias. Highlights
of Ms. Fleming's 2004-05 season engagements include her role debut of
Handel's Rodelinda at the Metropolitan Opera; the 50th anniversary
galas for the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Houston Grand Opera; three
performances at Carnegie Hall including Opening Night with The Philadelphia
Orchestra on October 6, a solo recital, and a duo-recital at Carnegie
Hall's Zankel Hall with jazz pianist Brad Mehldau, which will feature
the world premiere of a work by Mr. Mehldau written especially for Ms.
Fleming. Ms. Fleming's orchestral appearances this season include performances
with the Berlin, Vienna, and New York philharmonics; the Orchestre de
Paris; the Chicago and Houston symphonies; and the Cleveland Orchestra.
She made her Philadelphia Orchestra debut at the 1998 Academy of Music
Anniversary Concert.
Gala events surrounding the Opening Night Concert include a cocktail
party at 5:15 p.m. for sponsors, benefactors, patrons, and members of
the Orchestra's 21st Century Society, as well as a champagne reception
at 7:45 p.m. for all who are attending the Opening Night Concert. In addition,
two separate dinners are being held in the Kimmel Center. Catered by Restaurant
Associates, with decoration by Evantine Design, the dinners
include:
- the Benefactor Dinner for Underwriters, Platinum Sponsors, and Corporate
Benefactors at 6:15 p.m. in the Kimmel Center's Perelman Theater and
Rooftop Garden (individual tickets are $1,000, Corporate Benefactor
tables are $10,000, and Platinum Sponsor tables are $15,000); and
- the Patron Dinner for Gold Sponsors, Corporate Patrons, Patrons, and
21st Century Society at 6:15 p.m. on Tier One and Tier Two of the Kimmel
Center (individual tickets are $375, Corporate Patron tables are $3,750,
Gold Sponsor tables are $5,000; and tickets for members of the Orchestra's
21st Century Society are $125).
Ms. Susan Y. Kim and Mrs. Edwin B. Mahoney chair Opening
Night 2004. The concert is generously sponsored by Bank of America,
the cocktail party and benefactor dinner is generously sponsored by Marsh
& McLennan Companies, and EB Games/Electronics Boutique
generously sponsors the champagne reception.
This year marks the 18th season for which the Orchestra Volunteer Committees
have presented the Opening Night festivities. The Volunteer Committees
for The Philadelphia Orchestra were formed in 1904, four years after the
Orchestra's first concerts. The Women's Committee, as it was originally
called, was the first permanent organization of its kind in the world,
and has since come to serve as a model for similar groups in the United
States and abroad. The current Volunteer Committees include 10 committees:
Central, Chestnut Hill, Chestnut Hill Musical Cocktails, Main Line and
Delaware, Main Line Associates, New Jersey, Old York Road, Rittenhouse
Square, the 21st Century Society, and West Philadelphia. Through their
endeavors over the past century, thousands of members of the Volunteer
Committees have given countless hours and their innumerable talents in
service to The Philadelphia Orchestra and the people of the greater Philadelphia
region.
OPENING NIGHT 2004 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
September 21, 2004 - The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts
- Tuesday evening
| 5:15 p.m. |
Cocktail party in the Kimmel Center
for all Gala attendees |
6:15 p.m.
6:15 p.m.
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Benefactor Dinner in Perelman Theater
and the Rooftop Garden
Patron Dinner on Tier One and Tier Two of the Kimmel Center |
| 7:45 p.m. |
Champagne reception in the Kimmel
Center for all who are attending the Opening Night Concert |
| 8:30 p.m. |
2004-05 SEASON OPENING NIGHT CONCERT - Verizon Hall
LIVE CONCERT BROADCAST - Broad Street, across from the Kimmel Center
The Philadelphia Orchestra
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor
Renée Fleming, soprano
| Wagner |
Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin |
| Strauss |
Four Last Songs |
| Dvorak |
Symphony No. 8 |
Concert-only tickets: $20-$130, 215.893.1999 or www.philorch.org.
For information on the Opening Night Gala, call 215.893.1956.
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Following a dynamic inaugural season as music director of The Philadelphia
Orchestra, Christoph Eschenbach continues his creative artistic
partnership with the venerable ensemble. Held in highest esteem by the
world's foremost orchestras and opera houses for his commanding presence,
versatility, and consummate musicianship, Mr. Eschenbach has been acclaimed
for his creative insight and dynamic energy, as a conductor, collaborator,
and ardent champion of young musicians.
Highlights of his second season with the Orchestra include a season-long
focus on Dvorak and other Czech composers; a four-week festival entitled
Late Great Works; and the continuation of the Orchestra's five-season
long, first-ever Mahler cycle. Mr. Eschenbach and the Orchestra conclude
the season with a tour of Asia.
Mr. Eschenbach continues as music director of the Orchestre de Paris.
This season he also leads the Lyric Opera of Chicago's season opening
production of Mozart's Don Giovanni; the Los Angeles Philharmonic;
the Staatskapelle Berlin; the Hamburg NDR Symphony; the Staatskapelle
Dresden; and the Chicago Symphony at Ravinia.
Mr. Eschenbach has made numerous recordings on various labels as conductor,
pianist, or both. His discography includes works of Adams, Berg, Berlioz,
Brahms, Glass, Mahler, Mendelssohn, Messiaen, Picker, Pintscher, Rouse,
Schnittke, Schoenberg, Schumann, Strauss, Tchaikovsky, and Webern.
Before turning to conducting, Mr. Eschenbach had earned a distinguished
reputation as a pianist. He began winning major competitions at age 11,
and made his United States debut in 1969 with the Cleveland Orchestra;
his conducting debut was in Hamburg in 1972. In 1981 he became principal
guest conductor of Zurich's Tonhalle Orchestra, and was chief conductor
from 1982-86. Additional posts include music director of the Houston Symphony
(1988-99); chief conductor of the Hamburg NDR Symphony (1998-2004); and
music director of the Ravinia Festival, summer home of the Chicago Symphony
(1994-2003).
Among Mr. Eschenbach's most recent awards are the Légion d'Honneur
of France and the Officer's Cross with Star and Ribbon of the German Order
of Merit. In 1993 he received the Leonard Bernstein Award, presented to
him by the Pacific Music Festival, where he served as co-artistic director
from 1992-98. Additional information about Mr. Eschenbach can be found
at
www.christoph-eschenbach.com.
Founded in 1900, The Philadelphia Orchestra has distinguished
itself as one of the leading orchestras in the world through a century
of acclaimed performances, historic international tours, best-selling
recordings, and its unprecedented record of innovation in recording technologies
and outreach. With only six music directors piloting The Philadelphia
Orchestra through its first century, the ensemble has maintained an unparalleled
cohesiveness and unity in artistic leadership.
This rich tradition is carried on by Christoph Eschenbach, who began his
tenure as the Orchestra's seventh music director in September 2003. As
Mr. Eschenbach and the Orchestra inaugurate a new era in the ensemble's
esteemed history, the Orchestra has announced the launch of the public
phase of a five-year, $125 million endowment campaign, entitled A Sound,
A City, A Civilization. Commitments to the campaign include a lead gift
of $50 million from the Annenberg Foundation, along with other major leadership
gifts that have allowed the Orchestra to raise the original campaign goal
from $75 million to $125 million.
In addition to Mr. Eschenbach's appointment as music director, the Orchestra
has observed several important milestones in recent years. The Orchestra's
2002-03 season celebrated Wolfgang Sawallisch's ten highly acclaimed years
at the Orchestra's helm and paid tribute to his artistic achievements
with the release of a Grammy-nominated three-disc set of Schumann recordings,
the first recordings made in Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center for the
Performing Arts. The Orchestra moved to its new home at the Kimmel Center
in December 2001, after celebrating its 100th Anniversary through a series
of activities surrounding the year 2000, including the internationally
televised gala Birthday Concert on November 16, 2000, a tour of Europe
in 2000, and tours of Asia and the United States in 2001. A tour in the
spring of 2003 took the Orchestra to nine cities in the United States,
Mexico, and South America. Christoph Eschenbach and the Orchestra capped
their first full season together with a tour of the music capitals of
Europe in the spring of 2004.
The Philadelphia Orchestra annually touches the lives of more than 1 million
music lovers worldwide through its performances (more than 300 concerts
and other presentations each year), publications, recordings, and broadcasts.
A major winter subscription season is presented in Philadelphia each year
from September to May, in addition to education and community partnership
programs. The Orchestra presents a series of concerts each year at New
York's Carnegie Hall, performing encores of some of its acclaimed concerts
from Philadelphia. Its summer schedule includes a month-long outdoor season
in Philadelphia at The Mann Center for the Performing Arts, free concerts
in local neighborhoods, and a three-week residency each August at the
Saratoga Performing Arts Center in upstate New York.
The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts hosts the Orchestra's home subscription
concerts. The Center includes two performance spaces, the 2500-seat Verizon
Hall, designed and built especially for the Orchestra, and the 650-seat
Perelman Theater for chamber music concerts. Designed by architect Rafael
Viñoly along with acoustician Russell Johnson of Artec Consultants
Inc., the Kimmel Center provides the Orchestra with a state-of-the-art
facility for concerts, recordings, and education activities. The landmark
building is named in honor of Philadelphia businessman and philanthropist
Sidney Kimmel, who gave the largest individual gift toward its construction.
Kimmel has served on the Board of Directors of The Philadelphia Orchestra
since 1995.
The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts (KCPA) and the historic Academy
of Music (where the Orchestra performed for 101 seasons) are operated
together as a single cultural facility by Kimmel Center, Inc. (KCI). A
variety of Philadelphia's other performing arts groups serve as resident
companies for the two buildings. KCI owns, manages, supports, and maintains
the KCPA. Kimmel Center, Inc., also manages the Academy of Music, owned
by The Philadelphia Orchestra Association since 1957, and where the Orchestra
continues to present the highly anticipated annual Academy Anniversary
Concert and Ball.
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