Budapest Festival Orchestra: 2017 Season Overview
- 28 Mar 2016 5:00 AM
On top of the usual orchestral symphonies, baroque and contemporary concerts, audiences will get some lighter bites too, with jazz and world music performances.
New Series
The BFO will be launching two new series in the upcoming season. The concert series Rising Stars gives three young and talented conductors, each of them special to the orchestra, the opportunity to introduce themselves to audiences. As Iván Fischer put it when describing the series:
“We want to develop the next generation of performers, and naturally that includes conductors at the beginning of their careers. I vividly remember what it was like when I was similarly thrown in at the deep end a few decades ago. It was so helpful to see so many pairs of friendly, supportive eyes in the concert hall. Please give these new youngsters a smile.”
The three conductors making their stage debuts will be Gergely Dubóczky and the Australian Vladimir Fanshil, both of whom have spent years working alongside Iván Fischer as assistant conductors, and Victor Aviat of France, who may be familiar to BFO audiences primarily in his role as an oboist.
The other new programme, Back to Nature, is a series of chamber music concerts performed in the orchestra’s rehearsal hall, where our musicians will play pieces by Bach, Vivaldi, Telemann, Brahms and Mozart on period instruments. Among the rare instruments on stage will be a Graf piano.
The Festival Orchestra’s Baroque Ensemble will be performing several concerts during the season: a real luminary of old music, Japanese-Bavarian violinist Midori Seiler will visit twice, performing an Italian and a German concert, while Hervé Niquet will join local musicians as artistic director and concert master for a performance of French baroque music.
Orchestral Concerts
Full orchestral performances will feature the music of Shostakovich, Mussorgsky, Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Liszt, Bartók, Mahler, Strauss, Wagner, Vivaldi and Berlioz. Their works will be interpreted by such world-renowned artists as Dmitri Kitayenko, who is returning with a concert of Russian music; 73-year-old Beethoven specialist Richard Goode; the legendary Greek violinist Leonidas Kavakos; Paavo Järvi, the ambassador of Estonian music; Kossuth-Prize-winning cimbalom player Oszkár Ökrös; and the compelling young conductor Robin Ticciati, who made his début last year with a concert of French music.
What's more, Budapest will be hosting Ilan Volkov, who considers it his mission to revive pieces by long-forgotten composers; Croatia’s Radovan Vlatkovic, one of the world’s most extraordinary horn players; his fellow Croatian Dejan Lazic, who has already played with the BFO at the BBC Proms in London and who has given Budapest audiences a pleasant surprise when standing in for András Schiff; French cellist Sonia Wieder-Atherton, whose sound is unique in its own right; as well as the returning Norwegian cello player Truls Mørk.
In this new season, Iván Fischer will be conducting the orchestra as they perform music by Ravel, Debussy, Dutilleux, Bartók, Schubert, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Mahler, Liszt and Strauss. This year, instead of our Surprise Concerts, Gábor Takács-Nagy will be conducting our Christmas Concerts at the Academy of Music.
After last year’s Mendelssohn-Schumann duo, this year’s Marathon will return to the work of a single composer; the cream of Hungary’s classical music crop will be focussing on Johannes Brahms for this day of music, co-organised with Müpa.
The upcoming season will once again include a busy touring schedule, which will see the BFO taking up residency at the San Sebastian Festival, a Far East tour with performances in China and Korea, and a major US tour with concerts in New York, Chicago and Boston.
Season tickets already on sale.
More: www.bfz.hu
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