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4 Debussy Lindberg Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic 2010–11 Season Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic: 2010–11 Season Alan Gilbert’s journey of musical discovery can be traced on Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic: 2010–11 Season; the series’ wide-ranging repertoire reflects his programmatic belief that individual works, both familiar and brand-new, should be combined in innovative ways in order to surprise, challenge, and delight the listener. “When I became the Music Director of the New York Philharmonic a year ago, I was excited by the prospect of creating a close connection with the audience,” Alan Gilbert has said, adding, “I wanted our listeners to know that we choose every work we perform out of a real commitment to its value, so that even if someone isn’t familiar with a piece, they would feel comfortable coming to hear it simply because we programmed it.” Alan Gilbert and the New York Philharmonic: 2010–11 Season — 12 highquality recordings of almost 30 works, available internationally — represents the breadth of Alan Gilbert’s programs in his second season as Music Director. Building on the success of last year’s Alan Gilbert: The Inaugural Season, the first time an orchestra offered a season’s worth of recorded music for download, the new series is more accessible and more flexible, offering performances either as a complete series or as individual works. The 2010–11 series allows listeners to explore and own music that spans world premieres of Philharmonic commissions to works by past masters. Subscribers also receive bonus content, including audio recordings of Alan Gilbert’s onstage commentaries, the program notes published in each concert’s Playbill, and encores given by the soloists — all in the highest possible audio quality available for download. For more information about the series, visit nyphil.org/itunes. New York Philharmonic Alan Gilbert, Conductor Chen Halevi, Clarinet Carter Brey, Cello Magnus Lindberg, Piano Markus Rhoten, Timpani Christopher S. Lamb, Percussion Daniel Druckman, Percussion Juhani Liimatainen, Electronics Recorded live October 7–8 & 12, 2010, Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts DEBUSSY (1862–1918) Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun) (1892–94) 10:21 Magnus LINDBERG (b. 1958) Kraft (1983–85; New York Premiere) 32:22 I II CHEN HALEVI, Clarinet CARTER BREY, Cello MAGNUS LINDBERG, Piano MARKUS RHOTEN, Timpani CHRISTOPHER S. LAMB, Percussion DANIEL DRUCKMAN, Percussion JUHANI LIIMATAINEN, Electronics LOU MANNARINO, Live Sound Design 2 3 17:11 15:11 New York Philharmonic 4 5 Notes on the Program By James M. Keller, Program Annotator Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun) Claude Debussy In Short Born: August 22, 1862, in St. Germain-en-Laye, just outside Paris, France Died: March 25, 1918, in Paris Work composed: begun in 1892 (perhaps as early as 1891); completed by October 23, 1894 Claude Debussy achieved his musical maturity in the final decade of the 19th century, a magical moment in France when partisans of the visual arts fully embraced the gentle luster of impressionism, poets navigated the indirect locutions of symbolism, composers struggled with the pluses and minuses of Wagner, and the City of Light blazed even more brightly than usual, enflamed with the pleasures of the Belle Époque. Several early Debussy masterpieces of the 1890s have remained firmly ensconced in the enduring repertoire, perhaps most strikingly the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun. Debussy was hardly a youngster when he composed it. He had begun studying at the Paris Conservatoire in 1872, when he was only ten; he then served as resident pianist and musical pet for Nadezhda von Meck, Tchaikovsky’s mysterious patroness, in Russia and on her travels during the summers of 1880–82. He finally gained the imprimatur of the Prix de Rome in 1884 (for his cantata L’Enfant prodigue), enabling him to spend the next two years in Italy. After inhaling the Wagnerian breezes of Bayreuth in 1888 and 1889, he then grew enamored of the sounds of the Javanese gamelan at the Paris International Exposition of 1889. During all this he also composed a great World premiere: December 22, 1894, at a concert of the Société Nationale de Musique in Paris, Gustave Doret, conductor New York Philharmonic premiere: November 12, 1905, Walter Damrosch conducting the New York Symphony (which would merge with the New York Philharmonic in 1928 to form today’s New York Philharmonic) many songs and piano pieces, some of which are still widely performed today. While defining the composer’s distinctive voice, the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun baffled many early listeners. Debussy’s fellow composer Alfred Bruneau wrote of the piece: [It] is one of the most exquisite instrumental fantasies which the young French school The Path to the Premiere Radical though the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun was, its premiere was entrusted to a relatively untried conductor, Gustave Doret (1866–1943). Doret would go on to become principal conductor of the Opéra-Comique, but in 1894 he was a recent graduate of the violin and composition programs of the Paris Conservatoire. He recalled the experience of premiering this Debussy work in his memoirs, Temps et contretemps, published in his native Switzerland a year before his death: The first concert I was to conduct at the Société Nationale was set for December 22, 1894, and, as I expected, it was to be a considerable test. At this debut of mine, Claude Debussy was to entrust me with the first performance of his Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. He took me to his tiny apartment on the rue Gustave-Doré (a strange coincidence!), spread out the proofs of the orchestral score, which were already covered with corrections, and sat down at the piano; while I, open-mouthed and with eager ears, sat beside him. I was completely seduced, entranced, overwhelmed. I promised that we would take as much time preparing the score as was needed. And never, I believe, did rehearsals take place in such an atmosphere of intimate collaboration. Debussy was constantly modifying this or that sonority. We tried it out, repeated it, compared it. Once the players had come to understand this new style, they realized that we would have a serious battle on our hands. Of course, Debussy’s name was familiar to the real connoisseurs, but to the general public it was still unknown. The hour of the great test duly arrived, Debussy pressing my hands and hiding his anxiety behind a grin that I had come to recognize. There was a vast silence in the hall as I ascended to the podium and our splendid flutist, Barrère, unfolded his opening line. All at once I felt behind me, as some conductors can, an audience that was totally spellbound. It was a complete triumph, and I had no hesitation in breaking the rule forbidding encores. The orchestra was delighted to repeat this work, which it had come to love and which, thanks to them, the audience had now accepted. has produced. This work is too exquisite, alas! it is too exquisite. Even at the distance of a century, listeners can appreciate Bruneau’s concern. Debussy — or at least the Debussy of the 1890s — sometimes seemed so obsessed with minute details of timbre that other musical concerns appeared to be overlooked; everything threatened to implode into a mass of sensual loveliness. Of the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun the composer 6 7 Notes on the Program (continued) Ferruccio Busoni said (intending, one would think, a compliment), “It is like a beautiful sunset; it fades as one looks at it.” Debussy’s eventual style was not to display the sort of firm, unmistakable architecture that most composers up until that time had cherished. His method would evolve into something more intuitive, with themes that invite little development, with harmonies inspiring momentary excitement rather than underscoring long trajectories. Although Debussy is sometimes called a musical impressionist, his aesthetic affinities would seem to be more allied to the symbolists, those poets and artists of the late-19th century who disdained the purely expository or representational and sought instead to evoke a specific, fleeting emotional illumination in the reader or viewer through sometimes mysterious metaphors. One of the highpoints of symbolist poetry was L’Après-midi d’un faune (The Afternoon of a Faun) by Stéphane Mallarmé. The poem first appeared in 1865 under the title Monologue d’un faune and then kept evolving until it reached a definitive version in 1876. At that point Mallarmé published it, under its new title, in a slim volume embellished with a drawing by Édouard Manet. Vintage symbolism it is: a faun (a rural deity that is half man and half goat) spends a languorous afternoon observing, recalling, or fantasizing about — it’s not always clear which — some alluring nymphs who clearly affect him in an erotic way. The poem became iconic in its time (although it was merely a point of departure for Mallarmé’s further, even more revolutionary poetry), and Debussy fell under its spell by the early 1890s, when he seems to have discussed with Mallarmé the idea of creating a musical parallel. Debussy appears to have embarked on the project sometime in 1892. By October 23, 1894, the score was complete and the piece was premiered two months later, to such acclaim that it was immediately encored on the same program. It became the most popular of Debussy’s symphonic compositions and inspired a river of commentary that continues to flow to this day. In an appreciation of the work, composer (and former New York Philharmonic Music Director) Pierre Boulez observed: It has been said often: the flute of the Faune brought new breath to the art of music; what was overthrown was not so much the art of development as the very concept of form itself, here freed from the impersonal constraints of the schema, giving wings to a supple, mobile expressiveness, demanding a technique of perfect instantaneous adequacy .... The potential of youth possessed by that score defies exhaustion and decrepitude; and just as modern poetry surely took root in certain of Baudelaire’s poems, so one is justified in saying that modern music was awakened by L’Après-midi d’un faune. Certainly the work was radical in its unremitting sensuality, but its harmonic implications were also profound, and in retrospect the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun may be considered a harbinger of the musical century that lay ahead. Instrumentation: three flutes, two oboes and English horn, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, antique cymbals, two harps, and strings. 8 Kraft Magnus Lindberg The Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence In Short Born: June 27, 1958, in Helsinki, Finland Resides: in Helsinki Work composed: 1983–85, on commission from the Helsinki Festival World premiere: September 4, 1985, by the Finnish Radio Orchestra and the Toimii ensemble, with EsaPekka Salonen conducting Magnus Lindberg, now in the second year of his two-year appointment as the New York Philharmonic’s Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence, emerged on the international music scene in the 1980s, one of a handful of Finnish composers of his generation that included Kaija Saariaho, Jouni Kaipainen, and EsaPekka Salonen. All four studied with the same teacher at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, the renowned composer and pedagogue Paavo Heininen. Lindberg also worked with another senior eminence of Finnish music, the composer Einojuhani Rautavaara. Lindberg and Salonen were close colleagues during their student years and together they founded Toimii, an instrumental ensemble that not only championed modern music but also helped both composers investigate novel instrumental possibilities and compositional procedures. Lindberg was also active as a pianist, making appearances in concert and on recordings, especially in contemporary repertoire. In 1981 he left Finland for Paris, where he studied with Vinko Globokar and Gérard Grisey. Other formative training came from Franco Donatoni (in Siena), Brian Ferneyhough (in Darmstadt), and at the EMS Electronic Music Studio (in Stockholm). His work has been honored with New York Philharmonic premiere: these performances, which also marked the New York premiere of this work such awards as the UNESCO International Rostrum for Composers (1982 and 1986), Prix Italia (1986), Nordic Council Music Prize (1988), Royal Philharmonic Society Prize (1993), and Wihuri Sibelius Prize (2003). During the 1980s Lindberg’s music revealed its composer’s penchant for complexity, a trait that led him to be uncompromising in the difficulties he sets before his musicians. “Only the extreme is interesting,” Lindberg proclaimed, continuing: Striving for a balanced totality is nowadays an impossibility. ... An original mode of expression can only be achieved through the marginal — the hypercomplex combined with the primitive. As the decade marched on, Lindberg grew increasingly preoccupied with the intricacies of rhythmic interaction on multiple levels; this led to the composition, in 1983, of Zona for solo cello and chamber ensemble. Zona — Lindberg favors short, single-word titles — brought 9 his investigations of rhythmic complexity to the practical limit of the unaided human mind, so for his next major work, the awardwinning Kraft (for orchestra plus an ancillary ensemble — Toimii, when the work was unveiled — playing on both traditional musical instruments and such “found objects” as chair legs and car springs), he devised a computer program to assist in generating more meticulous calculations to fuel his composition. Other computer programs would follow, always keeping up with advances in technology. In the course of music history composers drawn toward stylistic complexity have often arrived at a breaking point and then moved on to create within a sound-world that (at least from the outside) appears far simpler. Following the intense difficulty of Zona and Kraft, Lindberg proceeded to soundscapes that, in many cases, seem more relaxed and less insistently “on overload”; some might fairly be described even as smooth or spacious. This said, many of Lindberg’s scores, even in the modern “classicist” mode, remain generally vigorous, colorful, dense, and kinetic, and despite the extreme refinement of his compositional method his scores manage to sound very spontaneous. Although he has worked in a variety of genres, Lindberg has carved out a particular reputation as a composer of orchestral music. “The orchestra,” he has declared, “is my favorite instrument.” Symphonic works of the past decade include his Feria (which the New York Philharmonic performed in its 10 United States premiere, in 1997, conducted by Jukka-Pekka Saraste), a Concerto for Orchestra (2002), and concertos for cello (1999), clarinet (2002), and violin (2006). Among his most recent works is Seht die Sonne (Behold the Sun), described in the Financial Times as “an extravagant and glittering piece on a grand scale”; and EXPO and Al largo, two New York Philharmonic commissions which, respectively, opened and closed the Orchestra’s 2009–10 season. These scores reveal Lindberg’s increasing interest in presenting clear-cut melody within a vibrant symphonic texture, underscoring that, even after composing some 80 works, he continues to develop an idiosyncratic path of personal creative discovery. Instrumentation: four flutes (all doubling piccolo) plus alto flute, three oboes and English horn, three clarinets (one doubling E-flat clarinet) and bass clarinet, three bassoons and contrabassoon, alto saxophone, four horns, four trumpets, four trombones, tuba, orchestral percussion, two harps, piano (doubling celesta), and strings; piccolos, horns, trumpets, and trombones onstage and off; solo instruments include clarinet (doubling E-flat, bass, and contrabass clarinets), cello, piano, timpani, and two percussion, and live electronics; clarinet, cello, and piano soloists also play a variety of percussion instruments (onstage and off). In the Composer’s Words Kraft — the title is the German word for “power” or “strength” — is a huge work, running about a half hour and spread across two connected movements, in which a group of soloists (playing amplified cello, clarinet, piano, and many percussion instruments) play a leadership role in relation to the large symphony orchestra. It’s often an intense, confrontational piece, but it also includes expanses of great delicacy. It proved to be a defining work in Magnus Lindberg’s oeuvre and for the concert music of its time, both in the breadth of its sonic palette and in the way it employs possibilities for spatial effects through the movement of musicians within the performing space. The composer has offered these thoughts about the piece: scrap (where you have small pieces of metal that you make noises with) up to the big, heavy pieces of metal that you can find. The title Kraft is, of course, explicit, but it has a deeper meaning in the way it affects the entire structure of the piece. It has a lot to do with the temporal processes, where the power of the space is merging things together. For instance, having a sound that is rotating around at full speed in the hall and gradually it centralizes and it stops in the middle of the hall — so there is a moment when the sound is being exposed from the four corners of the hall, and for the audience it makes a movement in the sound. There is this central point which has the big, hanging tam-tam, and it’s also a play-station for one of the soloists, not just for the purpose of making noise. Hopefully the effect of it is a structured world of richness in sound. I was living in Berlin in those days, and that was the time when the alternative music scene in Berlin was very strong, with a kind of post-punk music and groups like Einstürzende Neubauten. They had drills on stage, and they made an amazing noise with a kind of non-tonal pop music, and this aspect of it I found very fascinating. In a way, it was a shock for me to see that this kind of music was going on, and I was jealous about the sound — the impact of the sound and the huge forces they managed to put together. And I thought, “Why couldn’t we do this with the forces of the symphony orchestra, which has so much potential in different types of sound?” So I really went a long way and finally included the mobile soloists group to play untypical instruments. A performance of this piece takes a visit to the local scrap-yard to bring in plenty of junk. I wanted to include instruments that produce noise, so everything from sandpaper to stones, from metallic 11 New York Philharmonic 2010–2011 Season ALAN GILBERT Music Director Daniel Boico, Assistant Conductor Leonard Bernstein, Laureate Conductor, 1943–1990 Kurt Masur, Music Director Emeritus Violins Glenn Dicterow Concertmaster The Charles E. Culpeper Chair Sheryl Staples Principal Associate Concertmaster The Elizabeth G. Beinecke Chair Michelle Kim Assistant Concertmaster The William Petschek Family Chair Enrico Di Cecco Carol Webb Yoko Takebe Minyoung Chang+ Hae-Young Ham The Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. George Chair Lisa GiHae Kim Kuan-Cheng Lu Newton Mansfield The Edward and Priscilla Pilcher Chair Kerry McDermott Anna Rabinova Charles Rex The Shirley Bacot Shamel Chair Fiona Simon Sharon Yamada Elizabeth Zeltser The William and Elfriede Cellos Carter Brey Marilyn Dubow The Sue and Eugene Mercy, Jr. Chair Principal The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Chair Martin Eshelman Quan Ge Judith Ginsberg Hanna Lachert Hyunju Lee Daniel Reed Mark Schmoockler Na Sun Vladimir Tsypin Eileen Moon* The Paul and Diane Guenther Chair The Shirley and Jon Brodsky Foundation Chair Flutes Robert Langevin Principal The Lila Acheson Wallace Chair The Mr. and Mrs. James E. Buckman Chair Violas Cynthia Phelps Elizabeth Dyson Maria Kitsopoulos Sumire Kudo Qiang Tu Ru-Pei Yeh Wei Yu Wilhelmina Smith++ Principal The Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Rose Chair Rebecca Young* Irene Breslaw** The Norma and Lloyd Chazen Chair Dorian Rence Basses Eugene Levinson Katherine Greene The Mr. and Mrs. William J. McDonough Chair Principal The Redfield D. Beckwith Chair Dawn Hannay Vivek Kamath Peter Kenote Kenneth Mirkin Judith Nelson Robert Rinehart Orin O’Brien Acting Associate Principal The Herbert M. Citrin Chair William Blossom The Ludmila S. and Carl B. Hess Chair The Mr. and Mrs. G. Chris Andersen Chair Randall Butler David J. Grossman Satoshi Okamoto Ulrich Chair Yulia Ziskel Marc Ginsberg Principal Kim Laskowski* Roger Nye Arlen Fast Piccolo Mindy Kaufman Contrabassoon Arlen Fast Oboes Liang Wang Horns Philip Myers Principal The Alice Tully Chair Sherry Sylar* Robert Botti In Memory of Laura Mitchell Soohyun Kwon The Joan and Joel I. Picket Chair Principal The Ruth F. and Alan J. Broder Chair Stewart Rose++* Acting Associate Principal English Horn Thomas Stacy The Joan and Joel Smilow Chair Clarinets Mark Nuccio Acting Principal The Edna and W. Van Alan Clark Chair Pascual Martinez Forteza Acting Associate Principal The Honey M. Kurtz Family Chair Alucia Scalzo++ Amy Zoloto++ E-Flat Clarinet Pascual Martinez Forteza Bass Clarinet Amy Zoloto++ Lisa Kim* Principal The Pels Family Chair Sandra Church* Mindy Kaufman Evangeline Benedetti Eric Bartlett Bassoons Judith LeClair Cara Kizer Aneff** R. Allen Spanjer Erik Ralske+ Howard Wall Timpani Markus Rhoten Orchestra Personnel Manager Carl R. Schiebler Principal The Carlos Moseley Chair Kyle Zerna** Stage Representative Louis J. Patalano Percussion Christopher S. Lamb Principal The Constance R. Hoguet Friends of the Philharmonic Chair Audio Director Lawrence Rock Daniel Druckman* The Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ulrich Chair * Associate Principal ** Assistant Principal + On Leave ++ Replacement/Extra Kyle Zerna Harp Nancy Allen The New York Philharmonic uses the revolving seating method for section string players who are listed alphabetically in the roster. Principal The Mr. and Mrs. William T. Knight III Chair Keyboard Trumpets Philip Smith Principal The Paula Levin Chair Matthew Muckey* Ethan Bensdorf Thomas V. Smith Trombones Joseph Alessi Principal The Gurnee F. and Marjorie L. Hart Chair Amanda Davidson* David Finlayson The Donna and Benjamin M. Rosen Chair Bass Trombone James Markey In Memory of Paul Jacobs Harpsichord Lionel Party Piano The Karen and Richard S. LeFrak Chair Harriet Wingreen Jonathan Feldman Organ Kent Tritle Librarians Lawrence Tarlow Principal Sandra Pearson** Sara Griffin** Tuba Alan Baer Duoming Ba Principal 12 13 Honorary Members of the Society Pierre Boulez Stanley Drucker Lorin Maazel Zubin Mehta Carlos Moseley New York Philharmonic Gary W. Parr Chairman Zarin Mehta President and Executive Director The Music Director Alan Gilbert became Music Director of the New York Philharmonic in September 2009, the first native New Yorker to hold the post, ushering in what The New York Times called “an adventurous new era” at the Philharmonic. In his inaugural season he introduced a number of new initiatives: the positions of The Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence, held by Magnus Lindberg; The Mary and James G. Wallach Artist-in-Residence, held in 2010–11 by violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter; an annual three-week festival, which in 2010–11 is titled Hungarian Echoes, led by Esa-Pekka Salonen; and CONTACT!, the New York Philharmonic’s new-music series. In the 2010–11 season Mr. Gilbert is leading the Orchestra on two tours of European music capitals; two performances at Carnegie Hall, including the venue’s 120th Anniversary Concert; and a staged presentation of Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen. In his 2009–10 inaugural season Mr. Gilbert led the Orchestra on a major tour of Asia in October 2009, with debuts in Hanoi and Abu Dhabi, and performances in nine cities on the EUROPE / WINTER 2010 tour in February 2010. Also in the 2009–10 season, he conducted world, U.S., and New York premieres, as well as an acclaimed staged presentation of Ligeti’s opera, Le Grand Macabre. Mr. Gilbert is the first person to hold the William Schuman Chair in Musical Studies at The Juilliard School, and is conductor laureate of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra and principal guest conductor of Hamburg’s NDR 14 Symphony Orchestra. He has conducted other leading orchestras in the U.S. and abroad, including the Boston, Chicago, and San Francisco symphony orchestras; Los Angeles Philharmonic; Cleveland and Philadelphia Orchestras; and the Berlin Philharmonic, Munich’s Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, and Amsterdam’s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. From 2003 to 2006 he served as the first music director of the Santa Fe Opera. Alan Gilbert studied at Harvard University, The Curtis Institute of Music, and The Juilliard School. From 1995 to 1997 he was the assistant conductor of The Cleveland Orchestra. In November 2008 he made his acclaimed Metropolitan Opera debut conducting John Adams’s Doctor Atomic. His recording of Prokofiev’s Scythian Suite with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was nominated for a 2008 Grammy Award, and his recording of Mahler’s Symphony No. 9 received top honors from the Chicago Tribune and Gramophone magazine. On May 15, 2010, Mr. Gilbert received an Honorary Doctor of Music degree from The Curtis Institute of Music. 15 The Artist ers. ClaRecords also works with specialists in other artistic fields to stimulate dialogue between different forms of art in the 21st century. Projects include WindsUnlimited, a period instrument wind group exploring woodwind repertoire from the Classical and Romantic periods. With composer and bandoneon player Marcelo Nisinman, Mr. Halevi has formed TangoLab, a group of four diverse but complementary musicians who share a passion for expanding the horizons of tango. A native of the Negev desert in Israel, he studied the clarinet with Yitzchak Kazap and Richard Lesser, continuing with Mordechai Rechtman and Chaim Taub for his chamber music studies. Chen Halevi is clarinet professor at the Trossingen Hochschule für Musik in Germany, and gives master classes around the world. Since 2007 he has been a faculty member in the summer master classes at The Banff Centre in Canada. Clarinetist Chen Halevi has performed as soloist with major orchestras in the U.S., Europe, and Japan, including the Israel Philharmonic, Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, European Soloists, Heilbronn Chamber Orchestra, Moscow Virtuosi, Jerusalem Radio Orchestra, Leipzig’s MDR Symphony Orchestra, Hamburg’s NDR Symphony Orchestra, and Deutsche SymphonieOrchester Berlin. He participates frequently at festivals around the world, including the Marlboro, Ravinia, Santa Fe, Schleswig-Holstein, Davos, and Verbier Chamber Music festivals. He has performed chamber music with Pinchas Zuckerman and Christoph Eschenbach, as well as with well-known string quartets. Chen Halevi has had a number of works dedicated to him by eminent composers; a highlight is Doppelgaenger, a new clarinet concerto by Sven Ingo Koch, commissioned by the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. In 2007 Mr. Halevi founded ClaRecords to commission, produce, and record new pieces from leading and emerging compos- Finnish-born Magnus Lindberg is The Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence of the New York Philharmonic and one of 16 today’s leading composers. In addition to his compositional work, he also performs as a pianist: as a soloist in his own piano repertoire; in a duo, Dos Coyotes, with the cellist Anssi Karttunen; and as a member of the experimental ensemble Toimii, which he cofounded. During the 1970s and 1980s he performed regularly in a piano duo with Risto Väisänen, specializing in contemporary music. Mr. Lindberg has been a frequent soloist in Kraft, which has been performed at many of the world’s leading festivals and venues, including the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, Paris’s Cité de la musique, the Casa da Musica Porto, and at London’s Southbank Centre. Some of the orchestras with whom Mr. Lindberg has performed Kraft include the Finnish and Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestras, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Hessischer Radio Symphony Orchestra, and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic. Magnus Lindberg is also regularly invited to perform as soloist in his 1994 Piano Concerto, including performances with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, and is the soloist in the commercial recording of the work on the Ondine label with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen. Mr. Lindberg has also given several performances internationally as a pianist in Stravinsky’s Les Noces with the Labèque sisters, conducted by fellow composer and performer Thomas Adès, and with the Berlin Philharmonic and Sir Simon Rattle. Carter Brey was appointed Principal Cello (The Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Chair) of the New York Philharmonic in 1996. He made his official subscription debut with the Orchestra in May 1997 performing Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations led by then Music Director Kurt Masur, and has since performed as soloist with the Orchestra each season. He rose to international attention in 1981 as a prizewinner in the Rostropovich International Cello Competition. The winner of the Gregor Piatigorsky Memorial Prize, Avery Fisher Career Grant, Young Concert Artists’ Michaels Award, and other honors, he also was the first musician to win the Arts Council of America’s Performing Arts Prize. Mr. Brey has appeared as soloist with virtually all the major orchestras in the United States, and performed under the batons of prominent conductors including Claudio Abbado, Semyon Bychkov, Sergiu Comissiona, and Christoph von Dohnányi. His chamber music career is equally distinguished, with regular appearances with the Tokyo and Emerson string quartets, The Chamber Music 17 The Artist Society of Lincoln Center, and at festivals such as Spoleto (in both the United States and Italy) and the Santa Fe and La Jolla Chamber Music Festivals. He presents an ongoing series of duo recitals with pianist Christopher O’Riley; together they have recorded The Latin American Album, a disc of compositions from South America and Mexico released on Helicon Records. His most recent recording is of Chopin’s complete works for cello and piano, with pianist Garrick Ohlsson (Arabesque). Mr. Brey was educated at the Peabody Institute, where he studied with Laurence Lesser and Stephen Kates, and at Yale University, where he studied with Aldo Parisot and was a Wardwell Fellow and a Houpt Scholar. His violoncello is a rare J. B. Guadagnini made in Milan in 1754. tra, led by Eliahu Inbal. Born in 1978 in Hanover, Germany, Mr. Rhoten attended the College of Arts in Berlin, and continued his studies as an apprentice with the National Opera Orchestra Mannheim. Subsequently, he was awarded a stipend for the Academy of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra in Munich, and in 2002 became principal timpanist of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra under Lorin Maazel. He has also worked with conductors Mariss Jansons, Riccardo Muti, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Franz Welser-Möst, Thomas Daussgard, Paavo Järvi, and Mstislav Rostropovich, among others. Mr. Rhoten has also performed with the Hessen Radio Symphony Orchestra, Zurich Opera Orchestra, North German Radio Philharmonic, Lower Saxony State Opera Orchestra, and Munich Philharmonic Orchestra. Markus Rhoten joined the New York Philharmonic as Principal Timpani (The Carlos Moseley Chair) in September 2006. Prior to this appointment he was the principal timpanist of the Berlin Symphony Orches- Christopher S. Lamb joined the New York Philharmonic as Principal Percussion (The Constance R. Hoguet Friends of the Philharmonic Chair) in 1985. He made his Philharmonic solo debut in the world 18 premiere of Joseph Schwantner’s Percussion Concerto, one of several commissions celebrating the Philharmonic’s 150th Anniversary, and has since performed the work with orchestras throughout the United States. Mr. Lamb has also given the world premiere of Tan Dun’s Concerto for Water Percussion, also commissioned by the New York Philharmonic, which he then performed on the Orchestra’s South America tour, as well as in Asia and Europe with the London Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw, and Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestras. In November 2001, the third and most recent commission for Mr. Lamb by the New York Philharmonic, Susan Botti’s EchoTempo for Soprano, Percussion, and Orchestra, was given its world premiere by Ms. Botti, Mr. Lamb, and the New York Philharmonic under the baton of Kurt Masur. In 1999 Mr. Lamb was the recipient of a prestigious Fulbright Scholar Award to lecture and conduct research in Australia. On the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music since 1989, he has given clinics and master classes worldwide. He has designed his own line of concert snare drum sticks and is frequently consulted on instrument design concepts by leading percussion equipment manufacturers. Christopher Lamb has recorded chamber works on the New World, Cala, and CRI labels. He is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. Daniel Druckman, the New York Philharmonic Associate Principal Percussion (The Mr. and Mrs. Ronald J. Ulrich Chair), joined the Orchestra in 1991. His solo engagements have included the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the American Composers Orchestra; the New York Philharmonic’s Horizons concerts and San Francisco Symphony’s New and Unusual Music series; and recitals in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Tokyo. He has performed with ensembles including The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Group for Contemporary Music, Orpheus, Steve Reich and Musicians, and Philip Glass Ensemble, and has appeared at the major U.S. summer music festivals. As soloist and a member of the New York New Music Ensemble and Speculum Musicae, Mr. Druckman has premiered works by composers from Milton Babbitt to Charles Wuorinen. He serves as chairman of the percussion department and director of the percussion ensemble at The Juilliard School. Recent solo recordings include Elliott Carter’s Eight Pieces for Four Timpani and 19 The Artist Jacob Druckman’s Reflections on the Nature of Water on Koch International. The son of composer Jacob Druckman, Daniel Druckman had invaluable exposure to music and musicians at an early age. He attended Juilliard, where he was awarded the Morris A. Goldenberg Memorial Scholarship and the Saul Goodman Scholarship, and received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music in 1980. Additional studies were undertaken at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood, where he received the Henry Cabot Award for outstanding instrumentalist. with composers such as Paavo Heininen, Magnus Lindberg, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Kaija Saariaho, and Esa-Pekka Salonen. Since 2002 Mr. Liimatainen has been professor of sound design at the Theatre Academy of Finland. He is a longtime member of the ensemble Toimii, where he has been responsible for sound reproduction, live electronics, tapes, and videos, and with which he has appeared frequently as part of the solo group in Magnus Lindberg’s Kraft. He has also worked with the Avanti! orchestra and the Finnish Theater Orchestra, among other ensembles, and has performed on period instruments with the groups Free Okapi, Son Panic, and HumppAvanti! Juhani Liimatainen’s sound design and compositional work includes numerous theatrical productions, operas, festivals, and recordings. Juhani Liimatainen was born in Keuruu, Finland, in 1952. Between 1977 and 2002 he worked at the Experimental Studio of YLE (Finnish Broadcasting) where, among other responsibilities, he maintained and developed the studio, taught composers and musicians, and oversaw the design and execution of live electronics for studio and concert productions. He has done studio work 20 21 New York Philharmonic The New York Philharmonic, founded in 1842 by a group of local musicians led by American-born Ureli Corelli Hill, is by far the oldest symphony orchestra in the United States, and one of the oldest in the world. It currently plays some 180 concerts a year, and on May 5, 2010, gave its 15,000th concert — a milestone unmatched by any other symphony orchestra in the world. Alan Gilbert began his tenure as Music Director in September 2009, the latest in a distinguished line of 20th-century musical giants that has included Lorin Maazel (2002–09); Kurt Masur (Music Director from 1991 to the summer of 2002; named Music Director Emeritus in 2002); Zubin Mehta (1978–91); Pierre Boulez (1971–77); and Leonard Bernstein, who was appointed Music Director in 1958 and given the lifetime title of Laureate Conductor in 1969. Since its inception the Orchestra has championed the new music of its time, commissioning or premiering many important works, such as Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9, From the New World; Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3; Gershwin’s Piano Concerto in F; and Copland’s Connotations. The Philharmonic has also given the U.S. premieres of such works as Beethoven’s Symphonies Nos. 8 and 9 and Brahms’s Symphony No. 4. This pioneering tradition has continued to the present day, with works of major contemporary composers regularly scheduled each season, including John Adams’s Pulitzer Prize- and Grammy Award-winning On the Transmigration of Souls; Stephen Hartke’s Symphony No. 3; Augusta Read Thomas’s Gathering Paradise, Emily Dickinson Settings for Soprano and Orchestra; Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Piano Concerto; Magnus Lindberg’s EXPO; and Christopher Rouse’s Odna Zhizn. The roster of composers and conductors who have led the Philharmonic includes such historic figures as Theodore Thomas, Antonín Dvořák, Gustav Mahler (Music Director, 1909–11), Otto Klemperer, Richard Strauss, Willem Mengelberg (Music Director, 1922–30), Wilhelm Furtwängler, Arturo Toscanini (Music Director, 1928– 36), Igor Stravinsky, Aaron Copland, Bruno Walter (Music Advisor, 1947–49), Dimitri Mitropoulos (Music Director, 1949–58), Klaus Tennstedt, George Szell (Music Advisor, 1969–70), and Erich Leinsdorf. Long a leader in American musical life, the Philharmonic has over the last century become renowned around the globe, appearing in 429 cities in 62 countries on 5 continents. In October 2009 the Orchestra, led by Music Director Alan Gilbert, made its debut in Hanoi, Vietnam. In February 2008 the Orchestra, led by then-Music Director Lorin Maazel, gave a historic performance in Pyongyang, Democratic People’s Re public of Korea — the first visit there by an American orchestra and an event watched around the world and for which the Philharmonic earned the 2008 Common Ground Award for Cultural Diplomacy. Other historic tours have included the 1930 Tour to Europe, with Toscanini; the first Tour to the USSR, in 1959; the 1998 22 Asia Tour with Kurt Masur, featuring the first performances in mainland China; and the 75th Anniversary European Tour, in 2005, with Lorin Maazel. A longtime media pioneer, the Philharmonic began radio broadcasts in 1922, and is currently represented by The New York Philharmonic This Week — syndicated nationally 52 weeks per year, and available on nyphil.org. On television, in the 1950s and 1960s, the Philharmonic inspired a generation through Bernstein’s Young People’s Concerts on CBS. Its television presence has continued with annual appearances on Live From Lincoln Center on PBS, and in 2003 it made history as the first Orchestra ever to perform live on the Grammy Awards, one of the most-watched television events worldwide. In 2004 the Philharmonic became the first major American orchestra to offer downloadable concerts, recorded live, and in 2009 the Orchestra announced the first-ever subscription download series: Alan Gilbert: The Inaugural Season, available exclusively on iTunes, and comprising more than 50 works that were performed during the 2009–10 season. Since 1917 the Philharmonic has made nearly 2,000 recordings, with more than 500 currently available. On June 4, 2007, the New York Philharmonic proudly announced a new partnership with Credit Suisse, its first-ever and exclusive Global Sponsor. 23 Executive Producer: Vince Ford Producers: Lawrence Rock and Mark Travis Recording and Mastering Engineer: Lawrence Rock Performance photos: Chris Lee Alan Gilbert portrait: Hayley Sparks Magnus Lindberg's Kraft used by arrangement with G. Schirmer Inc. OBO Edition Wilhelm Hansen Major funding for this recording is provided to the New York Philharmonic by Rita E. and Gustave M. Hauser. Magnus Lindberg is The Marie-Josée Kravis Composer-in-Residence. Major support provided by the Francis Goelet Fund. Classical 105.9 FM WQXR is the Radio Home of the New York Philharmonic. Programs are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Instruments made possible, in part, by The Richard S. and Karen LeFrak Endowment Fund. Steinway is the Official Piano of the New York Philharmonic and Avery Fisher Hall. Exclusive Timepiece of the New York Philharmonic 24 25 Performed, produced, and distributed by the New York Philharmonic © 2010 New York Philharmonic NYP 20110104 26 27