The Philadelphia Orchestra
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Yannick Nézet-Séguin: Also performing , and , and April 15, , and April 28, , and June 12, , and June 18, , and October 16, , and October 31, , and December 9, , and February 4, 2026, , and March 1, 2026, , and March 10, 2026, , and May 5, 2026, , and May 29, 2026, , and June 11, 2026, , and and June 18, 2026.
Performers
The Philadelphia Orchestra
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Music Director and Conductor
Program
ALL-BEETHOVEN PROGRAMSymphony No. 4
Symphony No. 6, "Pastoral"
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately 75 minutes with no intermission.At a Glance
In March 2020, The Philadelphia Orchestra and Carnegie Hall were about to embark on a cycle of Beethoven’s nine symphonies to mark the composer’s 250th anniversary. The COVID-19 pandemic shut everything down the day of the first concert. It is with a renewed sense of celebration and gratitude that we present the cycle of these transformational compositions over the next few months as a belated birthday present.
Robert Schumann remarked that Beethoven’s Fourth Symphony was like a “slender Grecian maiden between two Nordic giants.” And yes, the work is certainly overshadowed by its mighty neighbors, the magnificent “Eroica” Symphony and the monumental Fifth. Beethoven’s contemporaries, however, viewed the Fourth as yet another one of the composer’s challenging innovations that changed forever the genre of the symphony.
After the famous Fifth, Beethoven took another track in his next symphony, looking for inspiration in nature that he so adored. A few weeks after composing the “Pastoral” Symphony, he declared: “No one can love the country as much as I do. For surely woods, trees, and rocks produce the echo which man desires to hear.” This is Beethoven’s most explicitly programmatic composition, filled with bird calls, a burbling brook, country dancing, a mighty thunderstorm, and a concluding hymn of thanksgiving.