KD SCHMID Gewandhausorchester Leipzig

Symphony

Gewandhausorchester Leipzig

31.08.24 - 04.09.24

about the tour.

Under the direction of Gewandhauskapellmeister Andris Nelsons, the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig goes on a European festival tour with pianist Daniil Trifonov.


Thomas Adès: "Shanty - Over the Sea" für Streichorchester (2020)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Klavierkonzert Nr. 25 C-Dur KV 503

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Anton Bruckner: Symphonie Nr. 6 A-Dur

 

Dates.

01.09.2024

Philharmonie Essen

Essen

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02.09.2024

Kölner Philharmonie

Köln

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04.09.2024

Kultur- und Kongresszentrum Luzern - KKL

Luzern

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An Orchestra full of experience.

Biography – about the orchestra.

The Gewandhausorchester is the oldest civic symphony orchestra in the world. The enterprise was founded in 1743 by a group of 16 musical philanthropists – representatives of the nobility as well as regular citizens - forming a concert society by the name of Das Große Concert. On taking residence in the trading house of the city's textile merchants (the 'Gewandhaus') in 1781, the ensemble assumed the name Gewandhausorchester. Many celebrated musicians have been appointed to the office of Gewandhauskapellmeister (Music Director and Principal Conductor), including Johann Adam Hiller, Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Arthur Nikisch, Kurt Masur, Herbert Blomstedt and Riccardo Chailly. Andris Nelsons assumed the position of 21st Gewandhauskapellmeister in September 2018. The Gewandhausorchester´s unique contribution to Europe´s historical and current musical wealth has been recognized with the award of the European Cultural Heritage Label.

Music lovers worldwide revere the highly individual sound palette that distinguishes the Gewandhausorchester from all other symphony orchestras. This unique sound identity, along with the extraordinarily rich diversity of the repertoire which the Gewandhausorchester performs, is cultivated in over 250 performances each year in the Orchestra's three 'homes': as symphony orchestra in the Gewandhaus, orchestra of the Leipzig Opera and orchestra for the weekly performances of the cantatas of Johann Sebastian Bach with the Thomanerchor in St. Thomas's Church. No other elite symphony orchestra dedicates itself so intensively to the performance of the music of J.S. Bach. The Gewandhausorchester has toured the globe on a regular basis since 1916 and records extensively for the media of radio, television, CD and DVD.


Few other ensembles have exerted such significant and enduring influence on the development of the symphonic music tradition as the Gewandhausorchester. Throughout its history, the orchestra has consistently attracted the collaborative energies of the world's most eminent composers, conductors and soloists. The Gewandhausorchester performed a complete cycle of the symphonies of Beethoven during his lifetime (1825/26), as well as the first ever cycle of Bruckner's symphonies to be mounted (1919/20). Wagner's Prelude to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Beethoven's 5th Piano Concerto Emperor, Brahms' Violin Concerto and Deutsches Requiem and Bruckner's 7th Symphony are just a fraction of the wealth of the core symphonic repertoire to be given its first performance by the Gewandhausorchester. The orchestra commissions and premieres new works every season to this day.

A decisive contribution to the development of the symphonic repertoire must be attributed to the celebrated Gewandhauskapellmeister, Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. During his tenure from 1835 until 1847, he presided over the first performances of numerous works from his own pen, for instance the Violin Concerto, the Scottish Symphony and his Overture to Ruy Blas, as well as the world premieres of many works of other composers, including Schubert's C major Symphony The Great and Schumann's 1st, 2nd and 4th symphonies. Through the introduction of new programming concepts - highly innovative for the time - Mendelssohn sharpened the Gewandhaus audiences' awareness of the music of times past, most notably reviving the performance of the orchestral oeuvre of J.S. Bach.

It was on Mendelssohn's initiative that Germany's first conservatoire was founded, in Leipzig, in 1843 - the modern-day University of Music and Theatre Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (UMT). Following the principles established by Mendelssohn himself, the Gewandhausorchester and the UMT have collaborated since 2004 in the form of the Mendelssohn Orchestra Academy (MOA), offering the most talented young musicians the opportunity to hone their skills to the level required by the world's elite orchestras. During the two-year training programme, members of the MOA receive individual tuition, coaching and mentoring from musicians of the Gewandhausorchester and from professors of the UMT. They hone their practical skills through regular active participation in concerts both at the Gewandhaus and on tour, in performances at the Leipzig Opera, at St Thomas’s Church, as well as in an intensive programme of chamber music. This enables the young musicians to acquire a diverse repertoire and gain invaluable experience for their future careers. In the 2024/2025 season, the Gewandhausorchester will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the founding of the MOA. Members of the MOA and of the Gewandhausorchester will perform a gala concert which will open the Mendelssohn Festival 2024. The MOA will also play a decisive role in the Shostakovich Festival 2025, as part of the Festival Orchestra for three symphonic concerts, as well as in chamber concerts taking place at the UMT and at the Mendelssohn House.

Recordings by the Gewandhausorchester

The CD productions released by the Gewandhausorchester have been decorated with a plethora of international record awards, including a Golden Disc. Under the direction of Riccardo Chailly, the Decca label produced a complete cycle of Beethoven's symphonies and nine of his overtures (CD, 2007-2009) and a cycle of Brahms' symphonies (CD, 2012-2013). Riccardo Chailly also led the Orchestra in numerous acclaimed DVD recordings of the symphonies of Gustav Mahler (accentus music, 2011-2015).

To mark the occasion of Herbert Blomstedt's 90th birthday in July 2017, a new complete cycle of Beethoven's symphonic oeuvre conducted by the Gewandhausorchester's Conductor Laureate was released by accentus music. In July 2022. shortly before Herbert Blomstedt’s 95th birthday, the first disc of a complete cycle of the symphonies of Franz Schubert was released (symphonies 8 & 9, Deutsche Grammophon). 2022 also saw the release of the third and final disc of Herbert Blomstedt’s Brahms symphony cycle, coupled with the Tragic Overture, op. 81 and the Academic Festival Overture, op. 80 (Pentatone).

Andris Nelsons, the 21st Gewandhauskapellmeister, has led the orchestra in DVD recordings on the accentus music label of Antonín Dvořák's 9th Symphony From the New World (released in February 2018), Alban Berg's Violin Concerto coupled with Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's Scottish Symphony (released in August 2018), and Peter Tchaikovsky’s 6th (February 2019) and 5th symphonies (February 2020).

On the occasion of Sofia Gubaidulina's 90th birthday in October 2021, Deutsche Grammophon released a CD with world premiere recordings of Der Zorn Gottes, Das Licht des Endes and the violin concerto No. 3 Dialog: Ich und Du (Vadim Repin, violin) under the baton of Andris Nelsons. In May 2022, a seven-CD box set of symphonic works by Richard Strauss, recorded by the Gewandhausorchester and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, of which Andris Nelsons is also Music Director, was released by Deutsche Grammophon.

Under the baton of Franz-Welser Möst, the Gewandhausorchester can be heard together with pianist Igor Levit in Tristan - Préludes for piano, tapes and orchestra of Hans Werner Henze (Sony Classic 09/2022).

In 2022 Andris Nelsons and the Gewandhausorchester completed the cycle of the symphonies of Anton Bruckner, produced on CD by Deutsche Grammophon. In 2023, the CDs of the cycle were released as a box set, including a recording of the Symphony No. 0, which will appear on CD for the first time played by the Gewandhausorchester.

February 2023 saw the re-release of the complete cycle of Bruckner’s symphonies under the baton of Herbert Blomstedt, Conductor Laureate of the Gewandhausorchester. The recordings, made between 2005 and 2012, have been considered reference performances ever since their initial release ten years ago (accentus music).

In spring 2024, the Gewandhausorchester and Andris Nelsons, together with Lang Lang and his wife, Gina Alice, released the album Saint-Saëns, featuring Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals in the version for two pianos and orchestra and his Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor.

A touring orchestra of KD SCHMID.

SEASON 2024/2025 - THIS BIOGRAPHY IS AVAILABLE BY COURTESY OF GEWANDHAUSORCHESTER LEIPZIG.

Dirigent/-in

Andris Nelsons

Andris Nelsons © Jens Gerber

Andris Nelsons is Music Director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Gewandhauskapellmeister of the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig. These two positions, in addition to his leadership of a pioneering alliance between both institutions, have firmly established Grammy Award-winning Nelsons as one of the most renowned and innovative conductors on the international scene today.

Nelsons’ positions in Boston and Leipzig commenced in the 2014/15 season and in February 2018, respectively. Autumn 2019 marked a ground-breaking highlight for Nelsons, the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig: three performances featuring musicians from both institutions within one joint orchestra were given at Boston’s Symphony Hall as part of the alliance between the two orchestras. In 2020, this unique partnership between both orchestras culminated in another highlight, a joint release of the major symphonic works by Richard Strauss for Deutsche Grammophon, including Strauss’s Festliches Präludium jointly performed by musicians from both orchestras. To mark the release, Nelsons and the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig completed a residency tour to London, Hamburg, Vienna and Paris to perform two all-Strauss programmes in May 2022.


Nelsons and the Boston Symphony Orchestra begin their 2023/24 season with a major European tour, performing in a number of prestigious summer festivals, including the BBC Proms, the Lucerne and Salzburg Festivals. In January 2024, the BSO and Nelsons will perform two guest concerts at Carnegie Hall with pianist Seong-Jin Cho and a concert performance of Shostakovich’s opera "Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District". This season, the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig embark on two tours under Nelsons’ direction: to Asia in November 2023, with concerts in Taiwan, Korea and Japan, and a European tour in March 2024, with three symphonic programmes celebrating the works of Tchaikovsky. Nelsons will also continue his guest appearances this season, performing with the Berliner Philharmoniker together with violinist Baiba Skride, and will return Vienna for performances with Wiener Philharmoniker in June, including the annual Summer Night Concert at Schönbrunn Palace. Nelsons will also conduct the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic for concerts featuring trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger.

Andris Nelsons has an exclusive recording relationship with Deutsche Grammophon, which has paved the way for three landmark projects with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig and the Wiener Philharmoniker. Nelsons and the Boston Symphony Orchestra partner on recordings of the complete Shostakovich symphonies and the opera "Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District" – this cycle is already the recipient of four GRAMMY awards in the categories "Best Orchestral Performance" and "Best Engineered Album". Furthermore, Nelsons and the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig continue their critically acclaimed Bruckner symphonic cycle. Both cycles released their fifth instalments in 2021. Nelsons’ recordings of Beethoven’s complete symphonies with the Wiener Philharmoniker, in celebration of the composer’s 250th birthday, were released in October 2019.

Born in Riga in 1978 into a family of musicians, Andris Nelsons began his career as a trumpeter in the Latvian National Opera Orchestra whilst studying conducting. He was Music Director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra from 2008-2015, Principal Conductor of the Nordwestdeutsche Philharmonie in Herford, Germany 2006-2009 and Music Director of the Latvian National Opera 2003-2007.

SEASON 2023/2024

Solist/-in

Daniil Trifonov, Piano

Daniil Trifonov © Dario Acosta / DG

Grammy Award-winning pianist Daniil Trifonov (dan-EEL TREE-fon-ov) is a solo artist, champion of the concerto repertoire, chamber and vocal collaborator, and composer. Combining consummate technique with rare sensitivity and depth, his performances are a perpetual source of wonder to audiences and critics alike. He won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Solo Album of 2018 with Transcendental, the Liszt collection that marked his third title as an exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist.

Trifonov undertakes major engagements on three continents in the 2023-24 season. He performs Brahms’s First Piano Concerto with the Cleveland Orchestra; Brahms’s Second with the Los Angeles and Israel Philharmonics; Schumann’s Concerto with the New York Philharmonic; Mozart’s “Jeunehomme” at Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center and others with the Rotterdam Philharmonic; Chopin’s First with the Orchestre de Paris; Mason Bates’s Concerto, a work composed for the pianist, with the Chicago Symphony, Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin; and Gershwin and Rachmaninov concertos with the Philadelphia Orchestra at home and on a European tour. In recital, he tours Europe with cellist Gautier Capuçon and takes a new solo program of Rameau, Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Beethoven to cities from Vienna, Barcelona and Milan to Boston, San Francisco, and New York, at Carnegie Hall.


Trifonov’s Deutsche Grammophon discography includes the Grammy-nominated live recording of his Carnegie recital debut; Chopin Evocations; Silver Age, for which he received Opus Klassik’s Instrumentalist of the Year/Piano award; the best-selling, Grammy-nominated double album Bach: The Art of Life; and three volumes of Rachmaninov works with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Yannick Nézet-Séguin, of which two received Grammy nominations and the third won BBC Music’s 2019 Concerto Recording of the Year. Named Gramophone’s 2016 Artist of the Year and Musical America’s 2019 Artist of the Year, Trifonov was made a “Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres” by the French government in 2021.

During the 2010-11 season, Trifonov won medals at three of the music world’s most prestigious competitions: Third Prize in Warsaw’s Chopin Competition, First Prize in Tel Aviv’s Rubinstein Competition, and both First Prize and Grand Prix in Moscow’s Tchaikovsky Competition. He studied with Sergei Babayan at the Cleveland Institute of Music.

SEASON 2023/24 - THIS BIOGRAPHY IS AVAILABLE BY COURTESY OF OPUS3 ARTISTS.

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