Symphony |
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester |
30.08.25 |
Anna Clyne: Restless Oceans (2018) für Orchester
Max Bruch: Konzert für Violine und Orchester Nr. 1 g-Moll op. 26
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Modest Mussorgsky: Bilder einer Ausstellung
The NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra has been North Germany’s musical ambassador to the world for more than 75 years. The orchestra in residence at the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, its programmes significantly shape the artistic profile of its home venue on the Elbe. Sounds and images from the world-famous concert hall are familiar to audiences throughout Germany and far beyond because of NDR concert broadcasts via video streaming, radio, television and on the orchestra’s online platforms. Under the guidance of its principal conductor Alan Gilbert, the orchestra has once again launched a diversified and innovative expansion of its programme. In various event formats ranging from symphony concerts to chamber, club and hour concerts to festivals lasting several days, works of all genres from the baroque to the present day are on the programme. Beyond these activities, however, the ensemble is also aware of its social responsibility and is particularly committed to the support of young musicians and education. In addition to its performances in Hamburg, the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra can regularly be heard in Lübeck, Kiel and Wismar and assumes a leading role at the major festivals in North Germany. Its international standing becomes apparent on its tours through Europe (most recently to France and Spain in October 2021), to North and South America and regularly to Asia.
Founded in 1945 on the initiative of the British military government in Hamburg, the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra (initially known as the “Symphony Orchestra of the North-West German Radio”, later — after the division of the radio stations in 1956 — as the “NDR Symphony Orchestra”) laid the foundations for a newly emerging life of music in post-war northern Germany. The orchestra did not wait long to begin appearing in concert halls outside of Germany and soon became an integral part of the international concert scene. The stages of its artistic development are associated with the names of principal conductors who moulded the orchestra into its present form. The first, Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt, assured continuity for a good 25 years and fundamentally shaped the unmistakable character of the ensemble. Later, the 20 years of intensive collaboration with Günter Wand became legendary. Principal conductor from 1982 and honorary conductor for life from 1987, Wand consolidated the orchestra’s international reputation. His reference interpretations of the symphonies of Johannes Brahms and Anton Bruckner in particular became the ensemble’s artistic calling card. In 1998, Christoph Eschenbach was appointed to the position of principal conductor, and in 2004, Christoph von Dohnányi joined the ranks of renowned great artists on the Hamburg podium. From 2011 to 2018, Thomas Hengelbrock as principal conductor set new accents in the history of the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra with his love of interpretive experimentation and unconventional programming. From 2015 to 2020, Krzysztof Urbański was principal guest conductor of the orchestra. Alan Gilbert has been principal conductor since the 2019/2020 season. The American-born conductor moved to Hamburg from the New York Philharmonic Orchestra; however, he has been closely associated with the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra for many years as he was its principal guest conductor from 2004 to 2015.
SEASON 2024/2025
Alan Gilbert © Marco Borggreve
Grammy Award-winning conductor Alan Gilbert has been Chief Conductor of Hamburg’s NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra since fall 2019 and Music Director of the Royal Swedish Opera since spring 2021. In Hamburg, where his contract was extended through the 2028-29 season, his adventurous programming, thought-provoking festivals, and regular online streaming are taking the orchestra to new artistic heights. Gilbert also holds positions as Principal Guest Conductor of Japan’s Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony and Conductor Laureate of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic. The first native New Yorker to serve as Music Director of the New York Philharmonic, he concluded his transformative eight-year tenure in the post in 2017.
In addition to his appointments, Gilbert maintains a major international presence, making guest appearances with orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, and Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. He has conducted operatic productions for the Metropolitan Opera, Los Angeles Opera, Zurich Opera, and Santa Fe Opera, where he served as the inaugural Music Director. Beyond Stockholm, key operatic highlights include his staged debut at Milan’s La Scala, where he led a new production of Porgy and Bess before returning to helm the company premiere of Korngold’s Die tote Stadt; his Dresden Semperoper debut with a new production of Schoenberg’s Moses und Aron; and his leadership of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra’s U.S. stage premiere of George Benjamin’s Written on Skin as part of the Lincoln Center–New York Philharmonic Opera Initiative.
In his sixth season as Chief Conductor of the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, Gilbert continues to diversify the ensemble’s programming. They open the season with star-studded accounts of Gurre-Lieder to celebrate the Schoenberg sesquicentennial, their second performance falling exactly 150 years after the composer’s birth. Their other 2024-25 highlights include new and recent works by Alex Paxton, Bernd Richard Deutsch, Dai Fujikura, Magnus Lindberg, and Dalit Warshaw at the second edition of “Elbphilharmonie Visions,” their biennial ten-day celebration of 21st-century music; collaborations with Leif Ove Andsnes, Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos, Lawrence Power, Antoine Tamestit, Daniil Trifonov, and Yefim Bronfman, with whom they give a six-city European tour; concert performances of Wozzeck with Matthias Goerne and Christine Goerke at the 2025 Hamburg International Music Festival; the world premiere of a new concerto by Kayhan Kalhor, featuring the composer and cellist Yo-Yo Ma; and symphonies by Beethoven, Brahms, Bruckner, and Tchaikovsky. Beyond Hamburg, 2024-25 sees Gilbert lead productions of The Marriage of Figaro, Die Walküre, and Wozzeck at the Royal Swedish Opera. He also makes his Czech Philharmonic debut and returns to the podiums of the Boston Symphony, Bavarian Radio Symphony, Cleveland, Israel Philharmonic, and Royal Swedish Philharmonic orchestras.
Last season, Gilbert and the NDR premiered The Elements, a five-part violin concerto by Jake Heggie, Jennifer Higdon, Edgar Meyer, Jessie Montgomery, and Kevin Puts, with NDR Artist-in[1]Residence Joshua Bell as soloist; launched the 2024 Hamburg International Music Festival; and toured both Europe and Japan. In addition, Gilbert led productions of Elektra and Parsifal as part of the Royal Swedish Opera’s 250th anniversary season; conducted Joan of Arc at the Stake at the Berlin Philharmonic; premiered a new Bernd Franke commission with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra; and joined the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony for performances of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony throughout the Japanese capital. His world premiere recording of Justin Dello Joio’s piano concerto, Oceans Apart, featuring dedicatee Garrick Ohlsson with the Boston Symphony, was released by Bridge Records. Gilbert’s previous NDR highlights include the inaugural edition of “Elbphilharmonie Visions”; a festival devoted to the “Age of Anxiety – An American Journey”; the orchestra’s 75th-anniversary celebrations; extensive Asian and European tours; world premieres of new commissions from Enno Poppe, Marc Neikrug, Lisa Streich, and Composer-in-Residence Unsuk Chin; and ambitious repertoire ranging from Magnus Lindberg’s Kraft and a semi-staged production of Ligeti’s Le Grand Macabre to symphonies by Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms, Schumann, Bernstein, and Bruckner, whose Seventh Symphony they recorded for Sony Classical.
In eight years as Music Director of the New York Philharmonic, Gilbert succeeded in transforming the orchestra, already one of the nation’s most venerable arts institutions, into a leader on the current cultural landscape. He initiated the positions of Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence, Mary and James G. Wallach Artist-in-Residence, and Artist-in[1]Association. Staged productions of Ligeti’s Le Grand Macabre, Janáček’s Cunning Little Vixen, Stravinsky’s Petrushka, and Honegger’s Joan of Arc at the Stake were presented to critical acclaim and capacity audiences, and he oversaw the development of two series devoted to contemporary music: CONTACT!, introduced in 2009, and the NY PHIL BIENNIAL, which was inaugurated in 2014 and returned in 2016 to a fanfare of critical approval. An ardent and longtime champion of Carl Nielsen, Gilbert’s recording of the Danish composer’s Third Symphony, made with the New York Philharmonic for their four-album box set as part of “The Nielsen Project” on Denmark’s Dacapo label, was chosen as Gramophone’s favorite recorded version of the work. Summarizing his achievement, the New Yorker observed, “Gilbert has made an indelible mark on the orchestra’s history and that of the city itself.”
From 2011 to 2018, Alan Gilbert served as Director of Conducting and Orchestral Studies at the Juilliard School, where he was also the first holder of Juilliard’s William Schuman Chair in Musical Studies. He made his acclaimed Metropolitan Opera debut in 2008, leading a production of John Adams’s Doctor Atomic that, when released on DVD, went on to win a Grammy Award. He also conducts on Renée Fleming’s Grammy-winning Decca release, Poèmes, and was nominated for the 2015 and 2016 Emmy Awards for Outstanding Music Direction in PBS’s Live from Lincoln Center broadcasts of two New York Philharmonic productions: the orchestra’s celebrated staging of Sweeney Todd, and its 100th-birthday gala tribute to Frank Sinatra, which featured Christina Aguilera, Bernadette Peters, and Sting. Gilbert received Honorary Doctor of Music degrees from the Curtis Institute of Music (2010) and Westminster Choir College (2016), as well as Columbia University’s Ditson Conductor’s Award, which recognizes his “exceptional commitment to the performance of works by American composers and to contemporary music” (2011). Elected to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2014, he was also named an Officier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government. He gave the 2015 lecture for London’s Royal Philharmonic Society during the New York Philharmonic’s European tour, speaking on “Orchestras in the 21st Century – a new paradigm,” and received a 2015 Foreign Policy Association Medal for his commitment to cultural diplomacy. During the COVID-19 lockdowns, Gilbert hosted a popular series of Facebook Live chats with fellow conductors Marin Alsop, Herbert Blomstedt, Karina Canellakis, Daniel Harding, Sir Antonio Pappano, Sir Simon Rattle, and Esa-Pekka Salonen. He was appointed as Royal Court Kapellmeister by the King of Sweden in 2022.
SEASON 2024/2025 - THIS BIOGRAPHY IS AVAILABLE BY COURTESY OF ENTICOTT MUSIC MANAGEMENT
María Dueñas © Felix Broede
Spanish violinist María Dueñas beguiles audiences with the breathtaking array of colours she draws from her instrument. Her technical prowess, artistic maturity and bold interpretations have inspired rave reviews, captivated competition juries, and secured invitations to appear with many of the world’s leading orchestras and conductors. On exclusive contract with the legendary Deutsche Grammophon since September 2022, Dueñas released her debut album in May 2023 featuring Beethoven’s Violin Concerto, for which she wrote her own cadenzas. Recorded live with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra and Manfred Honeck in the Golden Hall of the Musikverein Wien, the album was awarded an Opus-Klassik Prize.
María Dueñas has been studying with world-renowned Professor Boris Kuschnir at the Music and Arts University of Vienna for several years.
The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung has hailed the “freedom and joyous individuality” of her playing, while The Strad described her rising-star status as “seemingly unstoppable” after she won a whole series of international violin competitions (the 2021 Grand Prix at the Viktor Tretyakov International Violin Competition, the Getting to Carnegie Hall Competition and the 2018 Vladimir Spivakov International Violin Competition, among others). Not least among this succession of triumphs was her livestreamed run to victory at the 2021 Menuhin Violin Competition, at which she won not only the first prize and audience prize, but also a global online following and the loan of a golden-period Stradivari from Jonathan Moulds’ private collection. The Rheingau Music Festival awarded her the career advancement prize, and the BBC Radio 3 named her “New Generation Artist 2021-23.”
In previous seasons she gave her debut with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe under Herbert Blomstedt, the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and Oslo Philharmonic under Manfred Honeck, the Philadelphia Orchestra and Orchestre Métropolitain de Montreal under Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the San Francisco Symphony and the Dresdner Philharmonie with Marek Janowski and Kent Nagano, the Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia and Stanislav Kochanovsky, the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg under Gustavo Gimeno, the Staatskapelle Berlin with Alain Altinoglu, the Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen and the Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich with Paavo
Järvi, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and Mikko Franck, the Lithuanian National Orchestra and Charles Dutoit, the Lucerne Symphony Orchestra under Michael Sanderling, the Göteborg Symphony Orchestra under Jukka Pekka Saraste, the Bamberger Symphoniker under Christoph Eschenbach, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte-Carlo with Cristian Măcelaru, the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester and Alan Gilbert or the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra under Daniel Harding, among others.
As dedicatee of Gabriela Ortiz´ violin Concerto “Altar de Cuerda” (2022), Dueñas caused international sensation upon its premiere at Walt Disney Concert Hall with Gustavo Dudamel and Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, which would mark a fruitful artistic collaboration followed by electrifying musical moments at the 100th Hollywood Bowl Anniversary. Praised by The New York Times as “wholy captivating,” the concerto caused enthusiastic admiration after sold out premieres at Carnegie Hall, Boston and the Cervantino Festival in Mexico.
A multi-faceted musician, Dueñas became fond of composing after she started writing cadenzas for Mozart´s violin concertos. A solo piano piece, Farewell, was awarded a prize in the 2016 “Von fremden Ländern und Menschen” Competition for Young Composers. Recorded by pianist Evgeny Sinaiski, it was transformed into a music video filmed during the pandemic. Most recently she composed the piece for solo violin "Hommage 1770", inspired by her debut album and Beethoven's Violin Concerto.
A dedicated chamber musician, María has performed with Matthias Goerne, Itamar Golan and Renaud Capuçon, among other artists. She has also premiered several works such as Julian Gargiulo´s Sonata and solo caprices dedicated to her by the late Catalan composer Jordi Cervelló.
Born in Granada in 2002, María Dueñas moved to Dresden in 2014 to study at the Carl Maria von Weber College of Music, after winning a scholarship to study abroad awarded by Juventudes Musicales Madrid. Shortly afterwards she was discovered by the violinist and conductor Vladimir Spivakov and moved to Vienna on his recommendation.
Forthcoming highlights in the 2024/2025 season include her return to the Philadelphia Orchestra with Yannick Nézet-Séguin and to the Staatskapelle Berlin with Paavo Järvi, her debut with the Staatskapelle Dresden under Andrés Orozco-Estrada and with the Philharmonia Orchestra under Santtu-Matias Rouvali and Marin Alsop, a tour with pianist Alexander Malofeev with concerts in Carnegie Hall and Pierre Boulez Saal, friendly reencounters with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and Manfred Honeck as well as engagements with the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra under Marek Janowski and the RAI National Symphony Orchestra Turin with Andrés Orozco-Estrada.
As a stipendiary of the Deutsche Stiftung Musikleben, María Dueñas plays the Nicolò Gagliano violin of 17?4 and the Stradivarius “Camposelice” (1710), on generous loan from the Nippon Music Foundation.
SEASON 2024/2025 - THIS BIOGRAPHY IS AVAILABLE BY COURTESY OF KÜNSTLERSEKRETARIAT AM GASTEIG
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