Albuquerque Journal

NM Philharmon­ic announces 2022-23 concert season lineup

The festivitie­s kick off with a three-day Tchaikovsk­y festival

- BY KATHALEEN ROBERTS

The New Mexico Philharmon­ic’s new season embraces Russian romance, Brazilian guitar and Scheheraza­de in a program of classics and concertos.

The festivitie­s kick off with a threeday Tchaikovsk­y festival on Oct. 15, 16 and 22 with pianists Olga Kern and Sylvia Thereza.

Kern will play the composer’s Concerto No. 1, while Thereza will perform his Concerto No. 2. The concerts take place at 6 p.m. on Saturdays and at 3 p.m. Sunday.

“We had great success with our Beethoven festival last season,” music director Roberto Minczuk said.

The decision to produce a Tchaikovsk­y festival is the beginning of a trend, he said. The philharmon­ic will continue to produce annual festivals focusing on a single composer each season.

On Oct. 29, the musicians will present the three finalists of the Olga Kern Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n with more than $30,000 in cash prizes to the winners, along with concert dates throughout the U.S. and Europe.

On Nov. 5 Brazilian guitarist Yamandu Costa will play two original concertos on his seven-string guitar.

“Yamandu comes from the south of Brazil,” Minczuk said. “And he’s selftaught, but he’s like a force of nature. I met him when he was playing at a jazz bar. I had never seen such virtuosity on the guitar.”

Richard Strauss’ “Don Juan” welcomes the New Year on Jan. 14.

Beethoven dominates the Feb. 11 concert with his nearly 200-year-old Ninth Symphony. The program will open with a piece by the Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng composer Ellen Reid. The Philharmon­ic commission­ed the work with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra.

March 18 will mark Romanian cellist Andrei Ionita,winner of the 2015 Internatio­nal Tchaikovsk­y Competitio­n, performing Dvorák’s Cello Concerto, followed by Ravel’s Suites from “Daphnis et Chloé,” written for the ballet.

The classics series will end with violin virtuoso Jennifer Frautschi performing as the soloist in Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5, nicknamed “Turkish.” The concert will end with Mahler’s Symphony No. 1.

“I’ve decided we’re going to do all of the Mahler symphonies over the next seasons,” Minczuk said. “Mahler is the composer that explored the symphony orchestra like no other composer. His music is monumental. It’s like climbing Mount Everest.”

All concerts take place at Popejoy Hall on the University of New Mexico campus. All performanc­es are at 6 p.m., except for the Tchaikovsk­y Festival concerts, and are preceded by a free preconcert talk at 5 p.m. Single tickets are $22-$90 at nmphil.org.

 ?? ?? Yamandu Costa
Yamandu Costa
 ?? ?? Jennifer Frautschi
Jennifer Frautschi
 ?? ?? Sylvia Thereza
Sylvia Thereza
 ?? ?? Olga Kern
Olga Kern

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