AboutOfficial Site: http://www.oslophil.com/How it all started ... During World War I the appetite for symphonic concerts grew as never before – but so did inflation. A financial dispute between the orchestra and the National Theatre management in 1918 led to the collapse of the Musikforening’s concerts, and in the following year the the Oslo Philharmonic as we know it was founded – on private initiative and financed by private shareholders. Between the wars The orchestra’s leaders during the inter-war years included such soloists as Richard Burgin (later to become Koussevitzky’s concertmaster in Boston), Max Rostal and Robert Söetens (for whom Prokofiev wrote his second violin concerto) – an indication of the high regard in which the orchestra was held. The 1930s saw visits by such giants of the musical world as Stravinsky, and a welcome procession of guests including many who had been driven out of Germany by the Nazis: Fritz Busch, Erich Kleiber and above all, Bruno Walter – who conducted the opening concert of the orchestra’s 20th anniversary season. Other visiting conductors included Sir Thomas Beecham and Sir Adrian Boult from London; and Wilhelm Furtwängler, whose guest appearance took place only a week before the Nazi fleet sailed into the Oslo fjord on 9 April 1940. The post-war years During these years the Oslo Philharmonic hardly commanded the world stage in the way it does today, but during the joint stewardship of Herbert Blomstedt and Øivin Fjeldstad in the early 1960s the orchestra began to make waves abroad. Its first concert tour outside Scandinavia took place in 1962 and included venues such as Amsterdam/Concertgebouw, Berlin/Haus der Rundfunks, Bonn/Beethovenhalle and Frankfurt/Alte Oper. Critics noted the orchestra’s sound and style as “a new accent” within European music. The challenge of building an orchestra of international standing was about to be met. Oslo Concert Hall opened to the public in 1977 and over the next few years ticket sales doubled. In 1979 the decision was made to expand the orchestra to 95 musicians by 1990 – a plan that would be pushed forward by Mariss Jansons. The Mariss Jansons years During the early 1980s the Oslo Philharmonic was transformed into an orchestra of international standing. Its visits to London left Britain in no doubt as to its developing virtuosity. In 1985 it made its first major European tour with Jansons to Germany, Switzerland and Austria, and was immediately invited to return to Vienna’s Musikverein, The Edinburgh Festival, London’s Promenade Concerts and the Salzburg Festival also invited the orchestra to make prestigious guest appearances. With concert fame came success on record: after the orchestra’s wildly successful Tchaikovsky Symphonies cycle on Chandos, in 1987 EMI gave Jansons and the orchestra an exclusive recording contract, renewed in 1992. From the late 1990s the Oslo Philharmonic and Jansons recorded for the Norwegian label Simax, with releases including live recordings of Stravinsky’s The Firebird (complete version)/Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben, and a cycle of Brahms’s symphonies – the latter receiving great international acclaim. After 22 years of leadership, Mariss Jansons announced his resignation as music director in February 2000; in May 2002 the Oslo public took a moving farewell with their beloved music director, and in June the Oslo Philharmonic embarked on their final tour with him, to Prague, Ljubliana and – of course – Vienna. André Previn André Previn has also been instrumental in furthering the Oslo Philharmonic’s international career, most recently in connection with its successful tour of the USA in March 2005, with concerts in Washington (Kennedy Center), New York (Carnegie Hall), Chicago (Orchestra Hall), Philadelphia (Kimmel Center) and Ann Arbor (Hill Auditorium). This tour marked André Previn’s 75th birthday but was also an important part of Norway’s celebration marking 100 years of independence. Looking to the future |
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