Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Langrée"


3 mentions found


Review: At Mostly Mozart, the Sense of an Ending
  + stars: | 2023-07-26 | by ( Seth Colter Walls | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Change is coming for the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra and for its longtime music director, Louis Langrée — this month is the beginning of the end of his tenure with the orchestra. When the ensemble appears at Lincoln Center next year it will be with a freshly conceived name, and with the conductor Jonathon Heyward at the helm. So there is a sense of finality hovering over this summer’s offerings, which began last weekend with a free outdoor concert in Damrosch Park. On Tuesday night, Langrée and his players resumed their more typical places in the recently refurbished David Geffen Hall — renovations that kept the festival orchestra out of that theater last year. In remarks before the concert, Langrée warmly recalled his two-decade relationship with the orchestra and with New York audiences.
Persons: Louis Langrée, Jonathon Heyward, Heyward, Langrée, David, Amir ElSaffar, Mozart Organizations: Orchestra, Lincoln Center, David Geffen Hall Locations: Damrosch Park, New York
Rattle, he recalled, told him: “If you want to have a deep experience as a music director, you should live in the city. “The thing that was important to Louis was to keep things going,” Martin said. The Cincinnati Symphony today, as with the Mostly Mozart orchestra, is largely a product of Langrée’s efforts. He was actively involved in the renovation of its home theater, Music Hall, and has hired, Martin said, “somewhere between a third and half” of the players. And, crucially, the group is performing at a level of excellence that reflects his taste for color and nuance.
Persons: ” Langrée, Moss, Langrée, Simon Rattle, Martin, , Céleste, Antoine, Louis, ” Martin, “ It’s, Organizations: City of Birmingham Symphony, Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati Symphony, Music Hall Locations: Cincinnati, Alsace
Jonathon Heyward, the rising young conductor who this fall will become the first Black music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, has been tapped to lead Lincoln Center’s summer ensemble, a reimagined version of the Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra, the center announced on Wednesday. Heyward, 30, will start a three-year contract with Lincoln Center next year. His appointment is part of the center’s changes to the revered Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra, by giving it a new name, embracing a wider variety of genres and bringing more racial, ethnic and gender diversity to the stage. “It has everything to do with accessibility and presentation.”Heyward succeeds the orchestra’s longtime music director, Louis Langrée, whose contract expires this year. During Langrée’s 21-year tenure, he has helped rejuvenate the ensemble and cement its reputation as an acclaimed interpreter of the music of Mozart and the Classical repertoire.
Persons: Jonathon Heyward, Lincoln, Heyward, ” Heyward, Louis Langrée, Mozart Organizations: Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra, Lincoln Center Locations: Charleston
Total: 3