ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra

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Program and cast

Monday, April 22, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Selina Ott, trumpet

HK Gruber, conductor

 

PROGRAM

HK Gruber

Manhattan Broadcasts (1962–1964)

Concerto for trumpet and orchestra “Aerial” (1998–1999)

***

Short Stories from the Vienna Woods. Symphonic scenes from the opera “Stories from the Vienna Woods” (EA)

 

 

Saturday, May 4, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Nemanja Radulović, violin

Andrey Boreyko, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Aram Khachaturian

Concerto for violin and orchestra in D minor op. 46 (1940)

***

Dmitri Shostakovich

Symphony No. 8 in C minor op. 65 (1943)

 

 

Saturday June 29, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Vienna Singing Academy

Viennese choir girls

Alina Wunderlin, soprano

Caspar Singh, tenor

Daniel Dirthard, baritone

Tobias Wögerer, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Francis Poulenc

Gloria (1959–1960)

***

Carl Orff

Carmina Burana. Cantiones profanae for soloists, choir and orchestra (1936)

 

 

Saturday, October 19, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Julia Hagen, cello

Valentin Uryupin, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Unsuk Chin

Frontispiece for orchestra (–2019)

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Variations on a Rococo Theme in A major op. 33 for cello and orchestra (1876–1877)

***

Sergei Taneyev

Symphony No. 4 in C minor op. 12 (1896–1898)

 

 

Wednesday, October 30, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Marin Alsop, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Nina Senk

Flux (2021–2024)

Iannis Xenakis

Terretektorh (1965–1966)

***

John Luther Adams

Become Ocean (2012–2013)

 

 

Thursday, December 5, 2024 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Youth choirs

Marin Alsop, conductor

 

PROGRAM

georg Friedrich Handel

Gospel Messiah (arrangement of The Messiah. Oratorio in three parts HWV 56) (1741)

 

 

Thursday, January 23, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Yunchan Lim, piano

Marin Alsop, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Aaron Copland

Appalachian Spring. Ballet for Martha (1943–1944/1945)

Brett Dean

Fire Music (2011)

***

Sergei Rachmaninoff

Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18 (1900–1901)

 

 

Thursday, February 20, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Lukas Sternath, piano
Great talent

Markus Poschner, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Mathilde Wantenaar

Prelude to a New America (2018–2019)

Sergei Prokofiev

Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3 C major op. 26 (1917–1921)

***

Richard Strauss

From Italy. Symphonic Fantasy in G major op. 16 (1886–1887)

 

 

Thursday, April 3, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra

Wynton Marsalis, trumpet

Selina Ott, trumpet

Marin Alsop, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Wynton Marsalis

Concerto for trumpet and orchestra (2023) (EA)

***

Symphony No. 4 “The Jungle” (2019) (EA)

 

 

Thursday, May 22, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Vienna Singing Academy

Nikola Hillebrand, soprano

Sasha Cooke, mezzo-soprano

Marin Alsop, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Gustav Mahler

Symphony No. 2 in C minor for soprano, alto, choir and orchestra “Resurrection Symphony” (1888–1894)

 

Wednesday, June 4, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Timothy Brock, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Film “City Lights” (Director: Charles Chaplin, USA 1931)

Charles Chaplin

Music for “City Lights / Lights of the Big City” (director: Charles Chaplin, USA 1931) (1929–1931)

 

 

Sunday, June 15, 2025 - 7:30 p.m. | Great Hall

ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna

Vienna Singing Academy

Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha, soprano

Teresa Iervolino, mezzo-soprano

Edgardo Rocha, tenor

Adolfo Corrado, bass

Oscar Jockel, conductor

 

PROGRAM

Maurice Ravel

Le tombeau de Couperin (version for orchestra) (1914–1917/1919)

***

Gioachino Rossini

Stabat mater (1832–1841)

Photo gallery
ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna
Lukas Beck
© Lukas Beck
ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna 2
Priska Ketterer
© Lukas Beck
ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna 3
Volker Weihbold
© Lukas Beck
ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna 4
Shmuel Berzilei
© Lukas Beck
ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna 5
Julia Wesely
© Lukas Beck

Wiener Konzerthaus

The Wiener Konzerthaus ( Vienna Concert House or Hall) is one of the largest and most artistically progressive institutions in international musical life. During the course of a season, which extends from September to June, some 750 wide-ranging events take place and more than 600,000 visitors can listen to around 2,500 different compositions. With this comprehensive and varied selection, the Wiener Konzerthaus – together with the Vienna State Opera House and the Musikverein – is central to Vienna’s reputation as one of the world’s leading music capitals.

From its earliest days, the Wiener Konzerthaus has held the highest cultural aims and artistic mission: «To act as a venue for the cultivation of fine music, as a meeting point for artistic endeavour, as a home for music and a cultural centre for Vienna». It was in this spirit that the Konzerthaus was inaugurated on 19 October 1913 with a festive concert attended by Emperor Francis Joseph I. To mark the occasion, Richard Strauss wrote the «Festliches Präludium op. 61», which was followed by Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. This programme combination, comprising a contemporary work and a masterpiece from the past, served as a model for the Wiener Konzerthaus’s future direction: today, too, an awareness of tradition and the joys of innovation form the main pillars of the Konzerthaus’s artistic identity.

 

Access to the Wiener Konzerthaus

 

Public transport:


Short walk from the U4 Stadtpark Station: 10 min walk from the U4/U1 Karlsplatz Station, or take the 4A bus.

From the tram and bus stops at Schwarzenbergplatz, accessed by D, 2 & 71 trams and 3A & 4A buses. The 4a bus stop is at Hotel Am Konzerthaus.

Taxi:
The nearest taxi stands are at the Hotel Intercontinental in the Johannesgasse and at Hotel Am Konzerthaus on the Heumarkt.

Restaurants next to:

Gmoakeller

Hotels in immediate vicinity:

Hotel am Konzerthaus and Intercontinental

 

Great Hall

In the heart of the building (which consists of more than 600 rooms) lies the Konzerthaus’s flagship, the Grosser Saal (Great Hall). Designed with a sense of space and classical balance, its stage has provided the setting for many memorable concerts over the years. In this room, artists, audiences and atmosphere blend into a harmonious triad.


Home to world-famous orchestras, virtuoso soloists, renowned conductors and legendary jazz musicians, the Great Hall can accommodate an audience of 1,800 and offers the perfect venue for a wide variety of musical activity. The Great Hall has emerged from the major renovation with renewed splendour and, despite improvements in technical installation and audience comfort has continued to conserve its original elegance. Its unique atmosphere ideally lends itself to the broad range of artistic activities offered by the Vienna Konzerthaus.

 

Mozart Hall

Open and relaxing, welcoming and intimate, with its incomparable appeal, the Mozart Hall constitutes a jewel of international musical life. The perfect setting for all types of chamber music, from lute and Lieder recitals to string quartets and chamber orchestras, it can accommodate an audience of around 700 – an ideal size in which to experience the intimacy of chamber music and recital performances.

The Mozart Hall enjoys world-wide acclaim on account of its unique acoustics. This distinction makes it a top favourite with leading ensembles and soloists – as well as a popular venue for recordings. This was taken into account during the major renovation of the building: as with all other rooms in the Konzerthaus, the Mozart Hall is directly linked to a recording studio and a technical control room.
 

Schubert Hall

 

With its festive character, the Schubert-Saal presents the perfect model of a music salon, the restored use of the windows follwing the renovation having returned the room to its elegant, airy appearance.

Equipped with around 320 seats, it lends itself to a wide range of chamber-music concerts, as well as to receptions, dinners and lectures. It is home to the popular lunchtime concert series, as well as to events which enable promising young musicians to experience a professional concert stage. Many a musical career has been launched in the Schubert Hall of the Vienna Konzerthaus.
 

Seating capacity: 320
Auditorium: 240 m²
Podium: 50 m²

 

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