Jaap van Zweden conducts classics of the repertoire. Rudolf Buchbinder, whose interpretations of Beethoven are considered among the finest of our time, returns to the NY Phil to perform the composer's Fourth Piano Concerto. Brahms's Fourth Symphony is a masterpiece in which joy and sorrow seem to be in constant battle. The prelude to Wagner's Die Meistersinger is full of lyricism and fanfare. Part of Celebrate Jaap!
Jaap van Zweden conducts classics of the repertoire. Rudolf Buchbinder, whose interpretations of Beethoven are considered among the finest of our time, returns to the NY Phil to perform the composer's Fourth Piano Concerto. Brahms's Fourth Symphony is a masterpiece in which joy and sorrow seem to be in constant battle. The prelude to Wagner's Die Meistersinger is full of lyricism and fanfare. Part of Celebrate Jaap!
Jaap van Zweden conducts classics of the repertoire. Rudolf Buchbinder, whose interpretations of Beethoven are considered among the finest of our time, returns to the NY Phil to perform the composer's Fourth Piano Concerto. Brahms's Fourth Symphony is a masterpiece in which joy and sorrow seem to be in constant battle. The prelude to Wagner's Die Meistersinger is full of lyricism and fanfare. Part of Celebrate Jaap!
Jaap van Zweden conducts classics of the repertoire. Rudolf Buchbinder, whose interpretations of Beethoven are considered among the finest of our time, returns to the NY Phil to perform the composer's Fourth Piano Concerto. Brahms's Fourth Symphony is a masterpiece in which joy and sorrow seem to be in constant battle. The prelude to Wagner's Die Meistersinger is full of lyricism and fanfare. Part of Celebrate Jaap!
Ying Li, piano performance featuring Ani Kavafian on violin and Alex Cox on cello. Works by François Couperin, Isaac Albéniz, Serge Prokofiev, and Arno Babadjanian. Live streamed concert.
To celebrate the completion of the Miller-Scott Organ recital console, world-renowned organists Jeremy Filsell, David Briggs, and Wayne Marshall present a program of works for multiple keyboard instruments, featuring Saint Thomas' own two concert organs and Steinway piano.
CYO Soprano Golda Schultz returns for a Mozart concert aria and the evocation of heaven that concludes Mahler's Fourth Symphony. Francesco Piemontesi makes his NY Phil debut in the Mozart and performs the composer's sublime Piano Concerto No. 25. Gianandrea Noseda conducts.
CYO Soprano Golda Schultz returns for a Mozart concert aria and the evocation of heaven that concludes Mahler's Fourth Symphony. Francesco Piemontesi makes his NY Phil debut in the Mozart and performs the composer's sublime Piano Concerto No. 25. Gianandrea Noseda conducts.
CYO Soprano Golda Schultz returns for a Mozart concert aria and the evocation of heaven that concludes Mahler's Fourth Symphony. Francesco Piemontesi makes his NY Phil debut in the Mozart and performs the composer's sublime Piano Concerto No. 25. Gianandrea Noseda conducts.
CYO Winner of the 2021 International Chopin Competition, Bruce Liu makes his NY Phil debut performing Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, a sparkling showcase for the piano soloist. Santtu-Matias Rouvali conducts Dvořák's stormy, powerful Seventh Symphony and Farrenc's toe-tapping Second Overture.
CYO Winner of the 2021 International Chopin Competition, Bruce Liu makes his NY Phil debut performing Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, a sparkling showcase for the piano soloist. Santtu-Matias Rouvali conducts Dvořák's stormy, powerful Seventh Symphony and Farrenc's toe-tapping Second Overture.
CYO Winner of the 2021 International Chopin Competition, Bruce Liu makes his NY Phil debut performing Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, a sparkling showcase for the piano soloist. Santtu-Matias Rouvali conducts Dvořák's stormy, powerful Seventh Symphony and Farrenc's toe-tapping Second Overture.
Acclaimed pianist Emanuel Ax returns to the NY Phil to perform Swedish composer Anders Hillborg's new work for piano and orchestra. Also on the program are Sibelius's tone poem depicting the Finnish people's struggle for independence and Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 3, replete with Russian dance rhythms. Conductor Eun Sun Kim makes her NY Phil debut.
Acclaimed pianist Emanuel Ax returns to the NY Phil to perform Swedish composer Anders Hillborg's new work for piano and orchestra. Also on the program are Sibelius's tone poem depicting the Finnish people's struggle for independence and Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 3, replete with Russian dance rhythms. Conductor Eun Sun Kim makes her NY Phil debut.
Acclaimed pianist Emanuel Ax returns to the NY Phil to perform Swedish composer Anders Hillborg's new work for piano and orchestra. Also on the program are Sibelius's tone poem depicting the Finnish people's struggle for independence and Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 3, replete with Russian dance rhythms. Conductor Eun Sun Kim makes her NY Phil debut.
The NY Phil has a special connection to Beethoven's Fifth: it was played on our first concert in 1842 and has delighted audiences countless times since. Jaap van Zweden conducts this iconic masterwork and the Classically styled Sinfoniesatz by the child prodigy Felix Mendelssohn. Conrad Tao is the soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 17, a marvelous dialogue between piano and orchestra.
The NY Phil has a special connection to Beethoven's Fifth: it was played on our first concert in 1842 and has delighted audiences countless times since. Jaap van Zweden conducts this iconic masterwork and the Classically styled Sinfoniesatz by the child prodigy Felix Mendelssohn. Conrad Tao is the soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 17, a marvelous dialogue between piano and orchestra.
The NY Phil has a special connection to Beethoven's Fifth: it was played on our first concert in 1842 and has delighted audiences countless times since. Jaap van Zweden conducts this iconic masterwork and the Classically styled Sinfoniesatz by the child prodigy Felix Mendelssohn. Conrad Tao is the soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 17, a marvelous dialogue between piano and orchestra.
The NY Phil has a special connection to Beethoven's Fifth: it was played on our first concert in 1842 and has delighted audiences countless times since. Jaap van Zweden conducts this iconic masterwork and the Classically styled Sinfoniesatz by the child prodigy Felix Mendelssohn. Conrad Tao is the soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 17, a marvelous dialogue between piano and orchestra.
Concerts at Saint Thomas presents a unique orchestral concert for Passiontide. Conductor Justin Bischof will lead the Modus Operandi Orchestra and pianist Jeremy Filsell in Rachmaninoff's virtuosic Piano Concerto No. 3. The Saint Thomas Choir of Men and Boys will then feature in Poulenc's setting of the Stabat Mater.
Alice Sara Ott, in her NY Phil debut, performs Ravel's lush, jazz-influenced G-major Piano Concerto. The program — led by Karina Canellakis, also in her NY Phil debut — begins with Webern's remarkably spare, yet haunting Six Pieces. The concert's two tone poems look past earthly life: Richard Strauss's meditation on the death of an artist, and Scriabin's mystical and rhapsodic Poem of Ecstasy.
Alice Sara Ott, in her NY Phil debut, performs Ravel's lush, jazz-influenced G-major Piano Concerto. The program — led by Karina Canellakis, also in her NY Phil debut — begins with Webern's remarkably spare, yet haunting Six Pieces. The concert's two tone poems look past earthly life: Richard Strauss's meditation on the death of an artist, and Scriabin's mystical and rhapsodic Poem of Ecstasy.
Alice Sara Ott, in her NY Phil debut, performs Ravel's lush, jazz-influenced G-major Piano Concerto. The program — led by Karina Canellakis, also in her NY Phil debut — begins with Webern's remarkably spare, yet haunting Six Pieces. The concert's two tone poems look past earthly life: Richard Strauss's meditation on the death of an artist, and Scriabin's mystical and rhapsodic Poem of Ecstasy.
Twenty-two-year-old pianist Tony Siqi Yun makes his highly anticipated New York City recital debut, performing a dream solo debut program showcasing his artistry.