Philadelphia Orchestra
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The Philadelphia Orchestra, based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is one of the "Big Five" symphony orchestras in the United States and usually considered among the finest in the world. For the greater part of its history, the orchestra gave its concerts at the Academy of Music. Since 2001, its subscription concerts have been performed in the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in Verizon Hall, down the street from the Academy of Music, although the orchestra returns to the Academy of Music for its annual gala concert. The Philadelphia Orchestra also performs an annual series of concerts at Carnegie Hall.
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[edit] History
[edit] Leadership
The orchestra was founded in 1900 by Fritz Scheel, who also acted as its first conductor. In 1907 Karl Pohlig took over the post and served until 1912.
In 1912 Leopold Stokowski became principal conductor, and brought the orchestra to national prominence. Under him, the orchestra gained a reputation for great virtuosity, and developed what is known as the "Philadelphia sound".[1] Stokowski left the orchestra in 1941, and did not return as a guest conductor for nearly 20 years.
In 1936 Eugene Ormandy joined the organization, and jointly held the post of Principal Conductor with Stokowski until 1938 when he took over the role full-time. He remained with the orchestra for a total of 44 years, after which he became Conductor Laureate. Ormandy conducted many of the orchestra's best-known recordings. He took the orchestra on its historic 1973 tour of the People's Republic of China, where they were the first Western orchestra to visit that country in many decades. They were wildly popular in China, and have since returned for three more successful tours.
Riccardo Muti became principal guest conductor of the orchestra in the 1970s, and took over from Ormandy as Music Director in 1980, serving through 1992. His recordings with the orchestra included the symphonies of Ludwig van Beethoven, Johannes Brahms, and Alexander Scriabin, for the EMI and Philips labels.
Wolfgang Sawallisch then succeeded Muti as Music Director from 1993 to 2003. He made a number of recordings with the orchestra of music of Robert Schumann, Richard Strauss and Richard Wagner, among other composers, for the EMI label. However, the orchestra lost its recording contract with EMI during this time. Toward the end of Sawallisch's tenure, the orchestra released a self-produced set of recordings of the Schumann symphonies with Sawallisch conducting. In 2003, Sawallisch was named Conductor Laureate of the orchestra.
In 2003, Christoph Eschenbach took over as music director. This appointment was controversial because Eschenbach had not conducted the orchestra in over four years and there was a perceived lack of personal chemistry between him and the musicians prior to the appointment.[2] [3] At least one early report tried to downplay this concern.[4] The orchestra returned to commercial recordings with Eschenbach, on the Ondine label. However, in October of 2006, Eschenbach and the orchestra announced that his tenure as music director would end in 2008, at which time he will have served five years, the shortest tenure as music director in the history of the Philadelphia Orchestra, along with Pohlig.
In February 2007, the orchestra named Charles Dutoit to the newly created posts of chief conductor and artistic adviser for four seasons, starting in the fall of 2008 and running through the 2011-2012 season.[5] [6] This move was made to provide an "artistic bridge" while the orchestra searched for a new music director.[7] [8] [9]
Musicians from the orchestra were featured in a documentary film by Daniel Anker, Music from the Inside Out, which received theatrical release and television airings. The film has received both positive[10] and negative[11] criticism.
The Philadelphia Orchestra's current concertmaster is David Kim[12]. The Associate Conductor of the orchestra is Rossen Milanov.[13] The resident chorus of the orchestra is the Philadelphia Singers.
[edit] Firsts
The Philadelphia Orchestra also boasts an extraordinary record of media firsts. It was the first symphony orchestra to make electrical recordings (in 1925), the first to perform its own commercially sponsored radio broadcast (in 1929, on NBC), the first to perform on the soundtrack of a feature film (Paramount's The Big Broadcast of 1937), the first to appear on a national television broadcast (in 1948, on CBS), the first American orchestra to record the complete Beethoven symphonies on compact disc (in 1988), and the first major orchestra to give a live cybercast of a concert on the Internet (in 1997). On September 21, 2006 the Philadelphia Orchestra became the first major United States orchestra to sell downloads of their performances directly from the orchestra's website. While other American orchestras have downloads of their music on the internet, the Philadelphia Orchestra says it's the first to offer the downloads without a distributor.[14]
In other firsts, the Orchestra made diplomatic history in 1973 when it became the first American orchestra to tour the People's Republic of China, performing in Beijing's Great Hall of the People. In 1999, under Wolfgang Sawallisch, it became the first American orchestra to visit Vietnam. More recently, the orchestra appointed Carol Jantsch principal tuba as of 2006-2007[15], and according to the announcement, it is possible that she is the first full-time female principal tuba player of an American orchestra.[16]
The Philadelphia Orchestra performs more than 130 concerts during its winter subscription season from September to May. In its summer season spanning June and July, it performs at Philadelphia's outdoor Mann Center for the Performing Arts, followed by a three-week residency in August at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in upstate New York. In July 2007, the Orchestra will begin a residency at the Bravo! Vail Valley Festival in Vail, Colorado.[17]
[edit] Recordings
The Orchestra's first recordings were made in Camden, New Jersey, in 1917, when Leopold Stokowski led them in performances of two of Brahms' Hungarian Dances for the Victor Talking Machine Company. The historic first electrical recordings were also made in Camden, in April 1925, beginning with Saint Saens' Danse macabre. Then, in 1927, Victor began recording the Orchestra in the Academy of Music. Stokowski led them in experimental long-playing, high fidelity, and even stereophonic sessions in the early 1930s for RCA Victor and Bell Laboratories. They recorded the soundtrack for Walt Disney's Fantasia in multitrack stereophonic sound in 1940.
The Orchestra remained with RCA Victor through 1942. Following a settlement of a recording ban imposed by the American Federation of Musicians, the Philadelphia Orchestra switched to Columbia Records in 1944, recording some of the dances from Borodin's Prince Igor. They returned to RCA Victor in 1968 and made their first digital recording, Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra, in 1979. The Orchestra has also recorded for EMI and Teldec.
[edit] Music Directors
- Fritz Scheel (1900–1907)
- Carl Pohlig (1908–1912)
- Leopold Stokowski (1912–1938)
- Eugene Ormandy (1936–1980)
- Riccardo Muti (1980–1992)
- Wolfgang Sawallisch (1993–2003)
- Christoph Eschenbach (2003–2008)
- Charles Dutoit (chief conductor and artistic adviser designate, 2008-2012)
[edit] References
- ^ David Patrick Stearns, "Leopold Stokowski, the father of the Philadelphia Sound". Philadelphia Inquirer, 26 January 2007.
- ^ Anthony Tomassini, "Conductor Under Fire, Orchestra Under Pressure". New York Times, 23 November 2006
- ^ Peter Dobrin, "Orchestra has some lessons to consider". Philadelphia Inquirer, 29 October 2006.
- ^ Peter Culshaw, "Chemistry lessons". Telegraph, 18 May 2004.
- ^ Tom Di Nardo, "Charles Dutoit to head orchestra". Philadelphia Daily News, 23 February 2007.
- ^ Peter Dobrin, "Orchestra's interim pick: Dutoit". Philadelphia Inquirer, 23 February 2007.
- ^ Daniel J. Wakin, "The Philadelphia Orchestra Names a Chief Conductor". New York Times, 24 February 2007.
- ^ Peter Dobrin, "Which Dutoit will show up?" Philadelphia Inquirer, 25 February 2007.
- ^ Peter Dobrin, "Positivity on the podium", Philadelphia Inquirer, 3 March 2007.
- ^ Joshua Kosman, "Documentary gets behind the music made by orchestral musicians". San Francisco Chronicle, 30 December 2005.
- ^ David Patrick Stearns, "The orchestra with no discord". Philadelphia Inquirer, 20 April 2005.
- ^ Tom Di Nardo, "Orchestra's concertmaster holds a key job". Philadelphia Daily News, 2 February 2007.
- ^ Staff Conductors. Philadelphia Orchestra. Retrieved on September 22, 2006.
- ^ Stearns, David Patrick (September 21 2006). Philadelphia Orchestra enters the ear-bud age. The Philadelphia Inquirer.
- ^ Peter Dobrin, "Breaking the brass ceiling." Philadelphia Inquirer, 26 February 2006.
- ^ Philadelphia Orchestra announces winner of principal tuba auditions (PDF). Philadelphia Orchestra (February 27, 2006). Retrieved on September 22, 2006.
- ^ The Philadelphia Orchestra - Where We Play (HTML); accessed 2006-08-13.
[edit] Further reading
- The Philadelphia Orchestra: A Century of Music, edited by John Ardoin. 1999, Temple University Press, 240 pages.
- Those Fabulous Philadelphians, by Herbert Kupferberg. 1969, Scribner's New York, 257 pages.
- Riccardo Muti: Twenty Years in Philadelphia 1972-92, edited by Judith Karp Kurnick. 1992, Philadelphia Orchestra, 112 pages.
- The Philadelphia Orchestra Celebrates Sawallisch 1993-2003, edited by Sedgwick Clark. 2003, Philadelphia Orchestra, 80 pages.
- Within These Walls: A History of the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, by John Francis Marion. 1984, Academy of Music/Philadelphia Orchestra, 328 pages.
- Philadelphia Maestros: Ormandy, Muti, Sawallisch, by Phyllis White Rodríguez Peralta. 2006, Temple University Press, 192 pages.
[edit] External links
- Official website / home page
- Art of the States: Philadelphia Orchestra
- Beethoven's Nine, The Philadelphia Orchestra performs all nine of Beethoven's symphonies for NPR's Performance Today