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Philadelphia Orchestra celebrates 148th Anniversary of Academy
of Music with Concert and Ball
Music Director Christoph Eschenbach conducts Orchestra in his first
Academy of Music Anniversary Concert, joined by rising violin star Julia
Fischer and acclaimed mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade
Philadelphia's premier white-tie benefit also celebrates the
100th anniversary of the Bellevue, sponsor of the Anniversary Ball
(Philadelphia, December 20, 2004)
The Philadelphia Orchestra celebrates the 148th anniversary of the Academy
of Music with the annual Academy of Music Anniversary Concert and Ball
on Saturday, January 29, 2005. Music Director Christoph Eschenbach
makes his first appearance as conductor of the Academy of Music Anniversary
Concert, joined by rising, young violin star Julia Fischer and
highly acclaimed mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade. The concert
begins at 7:30 p.m. The Anniversary Ball also marks the 100th anniversary
of the Bellevue, where the gala champagne dinner and ball takes place
following the concert, with dancing to eight different orchestras located
throughout the hotel. The Bellevue is the lead underwriter of the 2005
Anniversary Concert and Ball, which is chaired by Mimi Dimeling and George
M. Ross. For gala information, call the Philadelphia Orchestra Academy
of Music Restoration Fund Office at 215.893.1940. For concert-only tickets,
which are available on the Family Circle and Amphitheatre levels, call
215.893.1999 or www.philorch.org.
The 148th Academy of Music Anniversary Concert features an all-French
program with guest violinist Julia Fischer and mezzo-soprano Frederica
von Stade. The program is comprised of two works featuring Ms. Fischer,
Saint-Saëns's Havanaise and Ravel's Tzigane; Frederica
von Stade performing arias from Offenbach's The Grand Duchess of Gérolstein
and La Périchole; and two additional works by Ravel,
his much loved Alborada del gracioso and the Second Suite from
Daphnis and Chloé.
The region's premier gala benefit, the annual Academy of Music Anniversary
Concert and Ball has been held each January for nearly half a century,
raising hundreds of thousands of dollars each year toward the restoration
and preservation of the Academy of Music. The Philadelphia Orchestra Association
owns the Academy, which served as the home of The Philadelphia Orchestra
for more than a century, from the ensemble's founding in 1900 to the opening
of The Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in December 2001.
This year two National Historic Landmarks, the "Grande Dame of Broad
Street" (the Bellevue) and the "Grand Old Lady of Locust Street"
(the Academy of Music), join together to cap a year of events celebrating
the 100th anniversary of the Bellevue. Lead underwriter of the 2005 Anniversary
Ball, the Bellevue building opened in 1904 as the Bellevue Stratford and
currently houses Philadelphia's luxury Park Hyatt Hotel. When the building
opened it was considered by many to be the most spectacular hotel in the
world. Its opulent French Renaissance style included sweeping architectural
flourishes such as massive Palladian windows, cameo-shaped rooms with
domed ceilings, and a two-tiered grand ballroom topped with lighting by
Thomas Alva Edison.
A rising star, Julia Fischer made her Philadelphia Orchestra debut
in October 2003. She has performed with the New York Philharmonic, the
symphonies of Houston, San Francisco, and Detroit, the Leipzig Gewandhaus
Orchestra, Zurich's Tonhalle Orchestra, and the Orchestre de Paris. Born
in 1983 in Munich, Ms. Fischer studies with Ana Chumachenco and performs
on the Stradivarius 1716 "Booth," on loan from the Nippon Music
Foundation. Ms. Fischer won the International Yehudi Menuhin Violin Competition
in 1995, where she received both the first prize and the special prize
for best Bach solo performance. Her first DVD, Vivaldi's Four Seasons,
was released in 2002 on the Opus Arte/BBC label.
Since her debut at the Metropolitan Opera in 1970, mezzo-soprano Frederica
von Stade has sung nearly all of her great roles with that company.
She has appeared with every other leading American opera company, including
the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the San Francisco Opera, and the Los Angeles
Music Center Opera. In Europe she appears regularly at La Scala, Covent
Garden, the Vienna State Opera, and the Paris Opera. Ms. von Stade's orchestral
appearances include the Boston Symphony, the Chicago Symphony, the Cleveland
Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, the New York Philharmonic, and
the London Symphony. She made her Philadelphia Orchestra debut in 1973.
Ms. von Stade has made over seventy recordings that have garnered six
Grammy nominations, two Grand Prix du Disque awards, and the Deutsche
Schallplattenpreis, among other awards.
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 Orchestra 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
Orchestra (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.
The Bellevue is a spectacular 100 year-old national historic landmark
building comprised of upscale shopping, restaurants, offices, a gourmet
food court, luxury hotel, and private state-of-the-art fitness center,
along with a salon, spa, and more. The Bellevue is managed and leased
by PREIT-RUBIN, Inc., management affiliate of Pennsylvania Real Estate
Investment Trust. For more information visit the Bellevue's website at
www.bellevuephiladelphia.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
2002-2003 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.
Mr. 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. For more information on The Philadelphia Orchestra visit
www.philorch.org.
ACADEMY OF MUSIC 148TH ANNIVERSARY CONCERT
January 29 at 7:30 p.m. - Saturday evening - Academy of Music
Music Director Christoph Eschenbach conducts his first Academy of Music
Anniversary Concert - the region's premier annual gala benefit - joined
by young violin star Julia Fischer and acclaimed mezzo-soprano Frederica
von Stade in a program of passionate French works.
The Philadelphia Orchestra
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor
Julia Fischer, violin
Frederica von Stade, mezzo-soprano
Ravel Alborada del gracioso
Saint-Saëns Havanaise, for violin and orchestra
Ravel Tzigane, for violin and orchestra
Offenbach Selected arias
Ravel Suite No. 2 from Daphnis and Chloé
Members of The Philadelphia Orchestra are graciously donating their
services for this evening's Pension Fund Benefit Concert.
Lead Underwriter of the 2005 Anniversary Concert and Ball is the Bellevue.
For gala information, please call the Academy of Music Restoration
Fund Office at 215.893.1940. Concert-only tickets are available in the
Academy of Music's Amphitheatre and Family Circle: $27-$42, 215.893.1999
or www.philorch.org.
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