Sun, Oct. 20, 2024, 11.00 am | Elbphilharmonie, Grand Hall
2nd Philharmonic Concert
Andrey Boreyko
Josef Suk: Fantastic Scherzo Op. 25
Igor Stravinsky: Divertimento from "Le Baiser de la fée"
Peter Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 4 in f minor op. 36
Andrey Boreyko
Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg
Andrey Boreyko
DirigentAndrey Boreyko recently ended his tenure as Music and Artistic Director of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir. Over the past five seasons, his inspiring leadership has raised the standard and profile of the orchestra, with whom he has toured extensively throughout Europe, Asia and the USA.
A sought-after guest conductor, Boreyko appears regularly with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra and Hamburg Philharmonic State Orchestra and returns to all of these orchestras this season. Boreyko began the 2024/25 season with a return to the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, with concerts at the Vienna Konzerthaus and the Festival of Nations in Bad Wörishofen. Later this season, he will conduct the Antwerp Symphony Orchestra in a subscription program celebrating Giya Kancheli's 90th birthday, and he returns to Tokyo to conduct Dmitri Shostakovich's 11th Symphony “The Year 1905” with the New Japan Philharmonic.
In recent seasons, Boreyko has enjoyed success with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, the Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin, the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, the Orquesta Sinfónica de Galicia and the Sinfonica Nazionale RAI. As “Resident Conductor” of the Orchestra Sinfonica de Milano (2022-2024), Boreyko conducted the season-opening concerts at Teatro alla Scala and Gustav Mahler's 2nd Symphony at the Mahler Festival, among others.
In 2022, Boreyko completed his eighth and final season as Music Director of Artis-Naples. Previously, he was Music Director of the Jena Philharmonic Orchestra, the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, the Bern Symphony Orchestra, the Düsseldorf Symphony Orchestra, the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra and the Orchestre National de Belgique, among others.
Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg
OrchesterThe Philharmonic State Orchestra is Hamburg’s largest and oldest orchestra, looking back on many years of musical history. When the “Philharmonic Orchestra” and the “Orchestra of the Hamburg Municipal Theatre” merged in 1934, two tradition-steeped orchestras combined. Philharmonic concerts have been performed in Hamburg since 1828, artists such as Clara Schumann, Franz Liszt and Johannes Brahms being regular guests of the Philharmonic Society. The history of the opera company goes back even further: Hamburg has been home to musical theatre since 1678, even if a regular opera or theatre orchestra was only formed later. To this day, the Philharmonic State Orchestra has embodied the sound of the Hansa City, a concert and opera orchestra in one.
During its long history, the orchestra encountered great artist personalities. Apart from composers of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, such as Telemann, Tchaikovsky, Strauss, Mahler, Prokofiev and Stravinsky, since the 20th century chief conductors such as Karl Muck, Joseph Keilberth, Eugen Jochum, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Horst Stein, Aldo Ceccato, Christoph von Dohnányi, Gerd Albrecht, Ingo Metzmacher and Simone Young have shaped the orchestra’s sound. Renowned conductors of the pre-war era such as Otto Klemperer, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Bruno Walter, Karl Böhm and Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt gave brilliant performances, as did outstanding conductors of our times: suffice it to mention Christian Thielemann, Semyon Bychkov, Kirill Petrenko, Adam Fischer and Sir Roger Norrington.
Starting with the 2015/2016 season, Kent Nagano has taken on the position of Hamburg’s General Music Director and Chief Conductor of the Philharmonic State Orchestra and the Hamburg State Opera and since June 2023 also its honorary conductor. In his first season Kent Nagano initiated a new project, the Philharmonic Academy, focusing on experimentation and chamber music. In 2016, Nagano and the Philharmonic toured South America, followed by concert tours to Spain and Japan in 2019, and in the spring of 2023, the Philharmonic State Orchestra made its debut at New York's Carnegie Hall under his direction, which was acclaimed by audiences and the press. Since 2017 Kent Nagano and the Philharmonic State Orchestra have continued the traditional Philharmonic Concerts at the new Elbphilharmonie, for which they commissioned Jörg Widmann to compose the oratorio ARCHE, which was given its world premiere during the hall’s opening festivities. The concert recording has been released by ECM, for which Widmann received the OPUS KLASSIK as Composer of the Year 2019, and ARCHE was performed again in 2023 to great acclaim.
The Philharmonic State Orchestra offers approximately 35 concerts per season and performs more than 240 performances per year at the Hamburg State Opera and the Hamburg Ballet John Neumeier, making it Hamburg’s busiest orchestra. The stylistic bandwidth covered by the 140 musicians, ranging from historically informed performance practice to contemporary works and including concert, opera and ballet repertoire, is unique throughout Germany. Chamber Music has a long tradition at the Philharmonic State Orchestra: what began in 1929 with a concert series for chamber orchestra has been continued since 1968 by a series of chamber music only.
In 2008 Simone Young and the Philharmonic State Orchestra won the Brahms Award of the Schleswig-Holstein Brahms Society. The orchestra has recorded the complete Ring by Wagner as well as the complete symphonies of Johannes Brahms and Anton Bruckner – the latter in the rarely-performed original versions – as well as works by Mahler, Hindemith and Berg, and has released DVDs of opera and ballet productions by Hosokawa, Offenbach, Reimann, Auerbach, J.S. Bach, Puccini, Poulenc and Weber.
The members of the Philharmonic State Orchestra feel equally beholden to Hamburg’s musical tradition and responsible for the city’s artistic future. Since 1978 the musicians have been participating in education programmes in Hamburg’s schools. Today, the orchestra maintains a broad education programme, including school and kindergarten visits, patronage for music projects, introductory events for children and family concerts. The orchestra’s own academy prepares young musicians for their professional careers. The Philharmonic’s musicians thereby make an equally enjoyable and valuable contribution to tomorrow’s music education in the music metropolis of Hamburg.
Introduction 60 minutes before the start of the event
With conductor Andrey Boreyko, we turn our ears to the East. With his fantastic Scherzo, the Czech Josef Suk, pupil and son-in-law of Antonín Dvořák, created an orchestral work that is emphatically lively - and in no way inferior to the following Divertimento from Stravinsky's ballet "The Fairy's Kiss" in terms of expressiveness.
When Peter Tchaikovsky wrote his Fourth Symphony, one of his best-known works, he was going through dark times. (Unhappy marriage, nervous breakdown, suicide attempt - the biographers paint dark scenes ...) The programme that he himself added to this Fourth sounds accordingly: The "force of fate" can be heard in the opening bars. According to Tchaikovsky, this "fate" constantly controls us, so that happiness and peace are never perfect. "One must submit to it and seek refuge in futile desires." After "a swarm of memories" and wild pizzicati from the strings in the famous third movement, Tchaikovsky comes to the conclusion: "If you find no cause for happiness in yourself, look to others." Life is ultimately "bearable after all" - as long as we turn to a "public amusement on a holiday", as in the symphony finale.