Sentinel & Enterprise

BSO extends pact through ’25

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Conductor Andris Nelsons has reached agreement on contract extensions with both the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Gewandhaus­orchester of Leipzig, Germany, the parties announced Monday.

With the three-year contract extension, Nelsons will remain the BSO’s music director through the the 2024-25 season. His current eight-year contract was scheduled to end in August 2022.

Nelsons also announced the continuati­on of the Boston Symphony Orchestra/Gewandhaus­orchester Alliance through 2025.

Under the new contract, Nelsons will lead the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a minimum of 12 weeks of programs at Boston’s Symphony Hall and will continue to have a significan­t presence each season at Tanglewood, the BSO’s summer home in western Massachuse­tts.

“I am filled with gratitude and great happiness for the opportunit­y to continue my musical journey with the BSO, and I feel a powerful sense of anticipati­on around being reunited with the orchestra and our dear audiences as soon as the regulation­s around the pandemic allow,” Nelsons said in a statement.

The BSO suspended its fall season for the first time since its founding in 1881 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Nelsons was named the BSO’s 15th music director in 2014.

“When Andris Nelsons became BSO music director in 2014, we were keenly aware of the great musical gifts he would bring to the orchestra,” BSO President and CEO Mark Volpe said. “What we didn’t realize at the time was Andris’ intrinsic ability to bring his entire heart, soul, and generous humanity to every situation, including his performanc­es on stage.”

— Associated Press

Picoult’s latest novel debuts at No. 1

Jodi Picoult’s latest novel, “The Book of Two Ways,” debuted in the top spot of The New York Times Best Sellers, reflecting sales in stores and online. Picoult is a resident of Hanover, N.H. “The Book of Two Ways” is her 26th novel.

Debuting at No. 2 is “The Coast-to- Coast Murder” by James Patterson and J.D. Barker, while last week’s No. 1 novel, Ken Follett’s “The Evening and the Morning,” fell to No. 3.

“Next to Last Stand” by Craig Johnson debuted at No. 4, and “Vince Flynn: Total Power,” a continuati­on of Flynn’s Mitch Rapp series of thrillers by Kyle Mills, is at No. 5 in its second week.

Rounding out the top 10 are “The Vanishing Half ” by Brit Bennett,” “Anxious People” by Fredrik Backman, “Troubled Blood” by Robert Galbraith, a pseduonym for J.K. Rowling,” All the Devils Are Here” by Louise Penny, and “One by One” by Ruth Ware.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Andris Nelsons conducts the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra during the traditiona­l New Year’s concert at the golden hall of Vienna’s Musikverei­n on Jan. 1, 2020.
AP FILE PHOTO Andris Nelsons conducts the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra during the traditiona­l New Year’s concert at the golden hall of Vienna’s Musikverei­n on Jan. 1, 2020.

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