Event is Live
Carnegie Hall Presents

Berliner Philharmoniker

Sunday, November 17, 2024 2 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
Please note that Hilary Hahn has withdrawn from all concerts through the end of November on the advice from her medical team as she continues to recover from a double pinched nerve. Performing Korngold’s Violin Concerto in her place is Vilde Frang.
Kirill Petrenko by Chris Christodoulou, Vilde Frang by Marco Borggreve
Two years ago, the Berliner Philharmoniker graced the Carnegie Hall stage on its first American tour with conductor Kirill Petrenko. “Even at the very top of the [orchestral] field, playing this spectacular—this virtuosic, colorful, confident, unified and committed—is vanishingly rare ... a master class,” raved The New York Times. The esteemed ensemble now returns for three consecutive performances, beginning with this anticipated Sunday afternoon concert that features Vilde Frang as soloist in Korngold’s Violin Concerto. The program also includes Rachmaninoff’s evocative Isle of the Dead and Dvořák’s Seventh Symphony.

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Vilde Frang: Also performing December 16.

Performers

Berliner Philharmoniker
Kirill Petrenko, Chief Conductor
Vilde Frang, Violin

Program

RACHMANINOFF The Isle of the Dead

KORNGOLD Violin Concerto

DVOŘÁK Symphony No. 7


Encore:

MONTANARI Giga (Senza Basso) from Violin Sonata in D Minor

Event Duration

The printed program will last approximately two hours, including one 20-minute intermission. 

Listen to Selected Works

The Berliner Philharmoniker Residency at Carnegie Hall is made possible by a leadership gift from the Marina Kellen French Foundation. 

At a Glance

This concert presents three masterpieces in the Romantic tradition, one from the 19th century and two from the 20th. Rachmaninoff’s The Isle of the Dead is an exquisitely spooky tone poem from 1909 based on an iconic painting of the same name. Korngold’s 1945 Violin Concerto is a shimmering, sensuous work by an artist known mainly as a pioneering movie composer, based on themes from four 1930s films. Both Korngold and Rachmaninoff were émigrés who made huge contributions to American music and culture. The concert concludes with Dvořák’s powerful Seventh Symphony, widely regarded as his greatest—a journey that moves through dark, minor-key turbulence toward a gloriously affirmative ending.

Bios

Kirill Petrenko

Kirill Petrenko has been chief conductor and artistic director of the Berliner Philharmoniker since the 2019–2020 season. Born in Omsk, Siberia, he received his training first in his ...

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Berliner Philharmoniker

The Berliner Philharmoniker, founded in 1882 as a self-governing orchestra, has long been one of the world’s leading orchestras. In the first decades, Hans von Bülow, Arthur ...

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Vilde Frang

In 2012, violinist Vilde Frang was unanimously awarded the Credit Suisse Young Artists Award, which led to her debut with the Vienna Philharmonic under the baton of Bernard Haitink at the ...

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