Breaking: Vienna Phil to play Bruckner in New Year’s Day concert

Breaking: Vienna Phil to play Bruckner in New Year’s Day concert

News

norman lebrecht

October 10, 2023

Christian Thielemann has convinced the players to include his favourite symphonist in the annual bonbonniere.

Here’s what they’re telling us:

Daniel Froschauer, Chairman of the Vienna Philharmonic, emphasizes Thielemann’s prominent role with the orchestra: “We have enjoyed a close artistic partnership with Christian Thielemann for many years, making him a Philharmonic conductor with whom we have a particularly strong relationship. With the New Year’s Concert 2024, we also join together to usher in the Bruckner anniversary year. For this reason, this year’s program will include for the first time a composition of Bruckner, as well as many other delightful, yet still unknown treasures from the composers of the Strauss family and their musical contemporaries.”

Thielemann, 64, has also been named an honorary member of the Vienna State Opera.

(Titles…. who cares?)

Comments

  • Player says:

    How appropriate. Another good news story!

    You may have missed that they have also just recorded the Bruckner symphonies with Thielemann, which may have something to do with it, on the (ahem) marketing front…

  • Anton says:

    Hopefully my Symphonic Prelude in C Minor, WAB 297.

  • Tiffany says:

    Honorary member ok, but for life? If it’s not for life, they can keep it.

  • Hugh says:

    I don’t want to jump to conclusions but, judging from this picture, Bruckner could have used some serious sartorial help.

  • Bored Muso says:

    This is the beginning of the end of another tradition.
    Historically, the New Years Day gig has been a light programme to sooth New Years Eve hangovers – nothing too demanding to absorb.
    It will be foolish for a serious composer like Bruckner to get an airing on this entertaining gig to it’s own folly.
    Will be interesting to see if the audience used to popular pieces rebel by not buying tickets or tuning in which will serve the Vienna Phil right.
    Why mess with a set programme to please the arrogance of the conductor?

    • Steve says:

      They’re just playing this:
      BRUCKNER Quadrille, WAB 121 (Orchestr. W. Dörner)

    • mk says:

      Bruckner wrote plenty of light silly stuff. You just don’t know it.

    • Ziobrifa says:

      look, for years the anniversaries of important composers have been celebrated at the neujharskonzert by including them in the program (e.g. Mozart, Lizt, Verdi, Wagner, Richard Strauss, Haydn, etc.). The choice has always been compositions that do not clash with the context of the concert, so no problem this time too with Bruckner (I didn’t know this composition, I listened to the piano version and it does not clash at all with the rest of the concert)

    • ML says:

      Relax, Muso, they’re not playing an entire symphony (although it would be fun to see the ballet company dance to that). It’s a quadrille. It could probably pass off as Johann Strauss Jr’s if you didn’t hear the presenter or read the title on the screen.

  • Rob says:

    Probably an orchestration of one of his two piano waltzes or the polka.

  • Matthias says:

    This is just in keeping with the tradition of honoring composer’s anniversaries. They’ve played Mozart, Beethoven and Liszt, for example. They’ll probably pick some obscure little Bruckner piece that kind of matches the Strauss program.

  • Matthias says:

    Composers that have been featured in VPO New Year’s concerts:
    Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Verdi, Berlioz, Richard Strauss, Liszt, Schubert, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Rossini, Brahms, Weber…

    https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_der_im_Neujahrskonzert_der_Wiener_Philharmoniker_aufgef%C3%BChrten_Kompositionen

  • zayin says:

    Only the Vienna Philharmonic could get exited about a Bruckner anniversary year, and on top of that, not be laughed at the local critics.

    Any American orchestra that’d announce a season based on Bruckner (anything) might as well just pack it up and convert their hall into a nursing home.

    • US Reader says:

      What a dumb comment. Isn’t that the same for every classical composer?

    • Herr Doktor says:

      It’s a shame Zayin that you have not had the opportunity to experience for yourself how profound and moving so much of Bruckner’s music is. In Germany and Austria, it’s an accepted fact (not even open to debate according to friends of mine who live there) that Bruckner was the second-greatest composer of symphonies ever. I also realize why some listeners never “get” Bruckner, and there are two primary reasons: They’re listening to the wrong performances (because in the wrong hands, Bruckner simply doesn’t work – and far too many conductors (easily a majority) really don’t know how to do justice to Bruckner’s music), or the listener’s personal worldview doesn’t accept that it’s possible to strive for and then achieve transcendence after a sustained journey, which to my ears is ultimately what Bruckner’s music is all about.

      • Stuart says:

        it’s an accepted fact (not even open to debate according to friends of mine who live there) that Bruckner was the second-greatest composer of symphonies ever

        An opinion rather than a fact. And an easy one to challenge. “not even open to debate” – very 2023. Are your friends so close minded?

      • TURHM says:

        accepted fact? Wtf? and who is the first according to your friends? The answer will reveal their stupidity as you will have to put Mozart, or Haydn, or Beethoven, or Brahms third?

      • Edo says:

        I always say that in the wrong hands a Bruckner’s symphony can become an unconventinal weapon, but withe right conductor and the right orchestra new universes can open

    • mk says:

      From personal experience over many years, Bruckner performances were always very well attended in Chicago, Minneapolis and New York.

    • Jobim75 says:

      They do it with Mahler all the time, didn’t get in what way it would be that bad…

    • ML says:

      It’s actually quite expensive and loss making to run a nursing home.

      Bruckner actually sells well in London, especially when conducted by Rattle, Nelsons or Bychkov. And they don’t even have to wait for an anniversary year to perform it!

  • Keith Barnes says:

    Thanks for the warning

  • Jerry says:

    We hall love Thielemann. And Bruckner.

  • Larry L Lash says:

    Musikverein, Großer Saal, Wien, Österreich
    Montag, 1. Jänner 2024
    11:15

    Program

    Karl Komzák: Erzherzog Albrecht-Marsch, op. 136
    Johann Strauß II.: Wiener Bonbons. Walzer, op. 307
    Johann Strauß II.: Figaro-Polka. Polka française, op. 320
    Josef Hellmesberger (Sohn): Für die ganze Welt. Walzer
    Eduard Strauß: Ohne Bremse. Polka schnell, op. 238
    Johann Strauß II.: Overture to the Operetta “Waldmeister”
    Johann Strauß II.: Ischler Walzer. Nachgelassener Walzer Nr. 2
    Johann Strauß II.: Nachtigall-Polka, op. 222
    Eduard Strauß: Die Hochquelle. Polka mazur, op. 114
    Johann Strauß II.: Neue Pizzicato-Polka. op. 449
    Josef Hellmesberger (Sohn): Estudiantina-Polka aus dem Ballett “Die Perle von Iberien”
    Carl Michael Ziehrer: Wiener Bürger. Walzer, op. 419
    Anton Bruckner: Quadrille, WAB 121 (Orchestr. W. Dörner)
    Hans Christian Lumbye: Glædeligt Nytaar! Galopp
    Josef Strauß: Delirien (Deliriums), Waltz, op. 212

    • Jobim75 says:

      Sounds nice and diverse, Ziehrer Lumber and Hellmesberger are a nice touch. Light Bruckner ? Interesting challenge..

  • Alasdair Munro says:

    Klemperer’s Merry Waltz next year?

  • guest says:

    A reactionary, ethnocentric orchestra has a special relationship with a reactionary, ethnocentric conductor. It wouldn’t be such a problem if there weren’t a whiff of unpleasant history in that.

    • Sue Sonata Form says:

      Dumb beyond belief. Ethnocentric orchestra; you mean like the Indonesian Gamelan Orchestra? Anything like that?

  • Sue Sonata Form says:

    Bruckner was a musical windbag, but apparently people like his works. Fair enough.

  • ViennaPhilFan says:

    Speaking with Vienna Phil, I just noticed that Christoph Koncz has now disappear their roster and is propably now full time conductor. And couple of years ago their principal violist Gerhard Marschner quietly resigned to freelance career (?) and now they have a new guy in lead viola trio.

    And wait, there is still more in neighbour orchestra – despite that I’m not following Wiener Symfoniker but still somehow Facebook put in my feed their fresh post where they are celebrating two new (1st) concertmasters and one of them is in my opinion more than very interesting appointment…

    • Marie says:

      Christoph Koncz has been appointed Chief Conductor of the Orchestre symphonique de Mulhouse. It’s too bad we don’t see him anymore.

  • GUEST says:

    Poor old Anton. With threads like those he’s wearing, it’s no wonder the young lassies he fancied wanted nothing to do with him.

  • Jim C. says:

    Considering the kind of year it’s going to be, this might be appropriate.

  • Save the MET says:

    Bruckner wrote a series of charming quadrilles, apparently when he was not bering a monastic symphonic composer. Have a listen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_nqal3kB4E&list=PLnX2GfEScH0FzMOOzFrelip8WIWN7eATu

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