|
|

Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra is a dynamic ensemble of
some of the world’s finest musicians. The fifth oldest
symphony orchestra in the United States and the oldest orchestra
in Ohio, the CSO has played a leading role in the cultural
life of Greater Cincinnati and the Midwest since its founding
in 1895.
The CSO entered a new era in September 2001, when the dynamic
young conductor Paavo
Järvi succeeded Jesús
López-Cobos (now Music Director Emeritus) and stepped
to the podium as the orchestra’s 12th Music Director.
In his fifth season as Music Director in 2005-2006, Maestro
Järvi conducts 14 subscription weeks in Cincinnati. He
is expanding the 111-year-old orchestra’s repertoire
with works never before performed by the CSO, and will lead
two additional CSO recording projects with the Grammy Award-winning
Telarc label.
Over the years, the CSO has built a reputation as one of the
world’s foremost orchestras and a champion of the new
music of its day. The CSO has been home to the American premieres
of works by such composers as Debussy, Ravel and Bartók,
and has commissioned works that have since become mainstays
of the classical repertoire, including Aaron Copland’s
Fanfare for the Common Man. The CSO was the first orchestra
to be broadcast to a national radio audience (1921) and the
third orchestra to record (1917). Today, the orchestra continues
to commission new works and to program an impressive array
of music.
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra maintains an active recording
schedule with Telarc,
the Cleveland-based Grammy Award-winning label. Through both
the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and Cincinnati Pops Orchestra,
the orchestra has sold nearly 10 million units on the Telarc
label.
Ohio Governor Bob Taft presented the Governor’s Excellence
in Exporting Award to the CSO in July 2002, recognizing the
global reach of the orchestra, especially through its international
recording sales and international touring.
The CSO was the first American orchestra to make a world tour
sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, and continues to
tour domestically and internationally, recently completing
an 11-concert, five-country tour to Europe in the fall of
2004 and an eight-concert tour of Japan in the fall of 2003.
The CSO made its Carnegie Hall debut in 1917 with then music
director Ernst Kunwald. Since that time, the CSO has performed
more than 44 times at Carnegie Hall.
One of 18 North American orchestras performing year-round,
including classical and Pops subscription concerts, Young
People’s Concerts and Lollipop Family Concerts at Music
Hall, Riverbend
concerts in June and July, and Concerts in the Park, the CSO
also is the official orchestra for the May Festival and Cincinnati
Opera. The CSO Chamber Players series, instituted by the orchestra
in 1988, provides an intimate chamber music alternative.
Telarc’s 32 recordings of the CSO over nearly two decades
have met with critical and listener acclaim. In 2003 the CSO’s
Music of Turina and Debussy was nominated for a “Best
Orchestral Performance” Grammy. Three other albums by
the CSO and Cincinnati Pops were named under the “Producer
of the Year, Classical” category. The Pops’ Copland:
Music of America won a Grammy in 1997, and four other
Pops recordings were nominated for Grammy Awards between 1987
and 1993. The Pops’ 1988 American Jubilee was
awarded France’s Grand Prix du Disque.
The CSO is committed to enhancing and expanding music education
for the children of Greater Cincinnati and works to bring
music education, in its many different forms, to as broad
a public as possible. Since 1999, the CSO has been reaching
this goal through its innovative education and outreach program
Sound Discoveries:
Music for Life, Music for the Community, Music for a Career.
Cincinnati Pops Orchestra
The CSO founded the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra in 1977 and
named Erich
Kunzel its conductor. Maestro Kunzel, celebrating his
40th season with the orchestra in 2005-2006, continues to
lead the Pops today.
The Cincinnati Pops, composed of musicians of the Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra, is one of the world's most active classical
pops ensembles, performing 20 or more subscription concerts
during the Music Hall season and 10 subscription concerts
at Riverbend Music
Center, the orchestra's outdoor summer home, where the
inaugural concert was given by Maestro Kunzel and the Cincinnati
Pops on July 4, 1984. Maestro Kunzel and the Cincinnati
Pops are also the custodians of another of Cincinnati's cherished
outdoor musical traditions, the Concerts in the Parks series.
The Cincinnati Pops has gained new fans the world over through
tour performances (Japan and Taiwan in 1990 and again in 1997,
plus domestic performances that include concerts every other
year at New York's Carnegie Hall), recordings on the Telarc
label, and television specials for PBS.
"Popular" concerts have been very much a part of
the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra tradition since the ensemble
was founded in 1895. When a young Leopold Stokowski became
the CSO's second music director in 1909, he gave renewed emphasis
to Pops concerts an aspect of Stokowski's career
that perhaps reached its zenith years later when, at the end
of the animated film Fantasia, he became the only conductor
ever to shake Mickey Mouse's hand! Pops performances were
also presented by subsequent CSO music directors, and the
CSO Pops series was also headed during the 1940s by CSO member
Reuben Lawson and the celebrated conductor and arranger Andre
Kostelanetz. It was Kostelanetz who commissioned Copland's
A Lincoln Portrait, and Kern's A Mark Twain Portrait
and gave both pieces their world premiere performances at
a special Cincinnati Symphony concert at Music Hall in 1942.
MEMI: Music and Events Management, Inc.
Learn more...
|
|